NEW BOOK: USING AI AS A TOOL, NOT A CRUTCH by JACQUELINE HADEL

The Kindle E-Book edition

New Book Release: Using AI as a Tool, Not a Crutch


Why I Wrote It, Who It’s For, and What Comes Next

I’m excited (and a little awed) to announce the release of my new book: Using AI as a Tool, Not a Crutch: A Practical Guide for Students and Teachers.

This book didn’t come from a trend. It came from a classroom. From conversations with students who were both fascinated and overwhelmed by the possibilities of generative AI. From fellow teachers asking: How do we keep integrity alive in the age of ChatGPT? From countless moments where I saw potential—but also pitfalls—in how AI was being used in education.

The Journey

This began as a few notes for my students and colleagues here in Bhutan. A practical guide to using ChatGPT responsibly. But as the weeks went on, those notes grew into something bigger: a framework, a toolkit, a manifesto of sorts.

I’ve always believed education is a shared space—dynamic, curious, ethical. And like any new tool, AI can either enrich that space… or flatten it. The difference lies in how we use it. That’s the heart of this book.

The Why

Because we need more than rules.
We need reflection.
We need resources that don’t shame or restrict, but guide and empower.

Too often, AI is framed as something to fear or ban in the classroom. But that’s a short-sighted approach. What students and teachers really need is a philosophy of use—how to wield this tool with curiosity, clarity, and care. That’s what this book offers.

The What

Inside, you’ll find:

  • Clear chapters for students and teachers alike
  • Practical prompts, templates, and classroom ideas
  • Guidance on ethical use, academic honesty, and critical thinking
  • Chapters on how to write with AI, revise with AI, and teach prompting as a literacy
  • Reflections on metacognition, bias, and responsible collaboration

It’s built for real classrooms and real people—not just policy makers or tech insiders. Whether you’re a student trying to improve your essay-writing process, or a teacher looking to integrate AI meaningfully into lessons, this book has something for you.

The What For

This book is part of a larger conversation. One that says:
AI is here. Let’s teach with it. Let’s learn with it. But let’s not lose ourselves to it.

Let’s remind ourselves—and our students—that thinking still matters. Creativity still matters. Human judgment, human voice, human curiosity… still matter.

That’s why it’s not called Using AI Instead of Thinking.
It’s Using AI as a Tool, Not a Crutch.

Where to Find It

The book is now available on Amazon: https://a.co/d/0N9D0ra . If you’re interested in teaching it, hosting a workshop, or just want to share your thoughts, reach out. I’d love to connect.

And if you’ve read it already—thank you. Your feedback means the world. This journey isn’t over. In fact, it’s just the beginning.


Here’s to a future where tools make us better thinkers, not lazier ones.
Here’s to teaching, learning, and adapting—with integrity.

The Paperback Edition

Released 8 June 2025

THIMPHU, BHUTAN: THE HISTORY OF BHUTAN by KARMA PHUNTSHO

Bhutan is a land of contradictions—ancient yet evolving, isolated yet deeply connected to the world in ways that defy logic. In The History of Bhutan, Karma Phuntsho unravels the country’s past with the precision of a historian and the storytelling instinct of a novelist. From the earliest myths of sacred mountains and hidden valleys to the rise of the Wangchuck dynasty and Bhutan’s cautious steps into modernity, Phuntsho traces the nation’s journey with a keen eye for detail and an unflinching sense of truth.


But this is more than just history. It’s a meditation on identity, faith, and the delicate balance between tradition and change. For anyone drawn to Bhutan—not just as a place on a map but as an idea, a living enigma—this book is essential. It doesn’t just tell you what happened. It makes you feel the weight of time pressing against the mountains, the pulse of a nation finding its way forward without forgetting where it began.

February 2015

Life 3. from winter park, florida

I don’t understand people who call themselves nomads, but…aren’t. When they say things like, “When I walk out of my apartment…” Wait. When you walk out of your what? You’re not a nomad, dipshit. It offends me because it’s a real choice, it’s a sincere lifestyle. I’ve been living it since 2003. Hating my coaching career by that point, and knowing that that wasn’t the career that was going to nourish my soul in this lifetime, I took off for Tokyo, Japan and never looked back. I initially thought I’d be leaving for just a year and then I’d return to the States and carry on with my life. But. Eight years after having shuffled through Okinawa, Egypt, Vietnam, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Malaysia, Hong Kong, Zanzibar, Zambia, and Cape Town…I finally returned to the States. To New York City. 2011. Had only spent one night there before, maybe in the late 90’s.

Anyway, I had been gone so long without any type of return to the U.S., I wasn’t even sure I still had citizenship! I really didn’t know the rules. After a bit of research, I basically concluded that no, I didn’t lose my citizenship and secondly, that it is really difficult to give up your citizenship. Relieved and ready to move on. New York City. Railroad apartment on 1st St between 7th and St. Mark’s. I had to walk out of the apartment, down the public hallway, and then into the front door that opened up into the kitchen, and that is where the toilet was. And the exposed bathtub in the middle of the kitchen. I joined Blink fitness and just showered there every day. 

I initially hadn’t wanted to return to the States. Even after 8 years. Not at all. I was so afraid that I’d get back and then somehow end up getting trapped here. So, I was giving lackluster vibes to my potential employers. Because. I didn’t want to commit to a two-year contract. Eventually agreed to like a 6-month one, I think. I later heard, from the owner, once she had gotten to know and love me, that they were all quite concerned about the ‘weirdo’ who wouldn’t commit to a longer contract and they were worried I was going to be trouble. Nah, I was good. Just knew that my peripatetic soul could not stay. Needed to fly again. After attending the U.S. Open and seeing a Nadal match (a cultural moment), I return to my beloved Japan. This time, Kobe. – excerpt

Cocoa Beach, Florida May 2024
Winter Park, Florida 20June2024