AI classes for seniors in Indianapolis
A patient introduction to AI for everyday life.
Bryan Crouch teaches approachable AI classes for older adults, senior communities, libraries, and lifelong-learning groups across Indianapolis. Participants can ask basic questions, practice at a comfortable pace, and learn how to use current tools more safely.
Useful skills without a technical lecture
A beginner class can start with simple, familiar tasks. Participants might ask for help planning meals, writing a family note, preparing questions for an appointment, learning about a hobby, comparing travel ideas, or understanding a confusing document.
Bryan demonstrates each step, explains what the tool is doing, and gives participants time to try it. Questions can be repeated. Nobody has to keep pace with a room full of experienced technology users.
- How to open and begin using a current AI assistant
- How to ask a clear question and request a better answer
- Everyday examples that feel immediately useful
- How AI can be wrong even when an answer sounds confident
- Privacy, impersonation, and scam warning signs
Safety belongs in the main lesson
AI creates new opportunities for useful help, and it also makes old scams easier to produce. Participants learn to slow down around urgent requests, protect personal details, verify important claims, and contact a trusted person when something feels unusual.
Health, legal, and financial questions require dependable professional guidance. The class explains how AI can help someone prepare questions while keeping the final decision with a qualified person.
Programs for communities and families
Sessions can be hosted by senior living communities, libraries, recreation programs, churches, neighborhood groups, or families. Bryan can offer a single introduction or a short series with more practice and follow-up questions.
Common questions
Useful details before you book
Do participants need to be comfortable with technology?+
No. The host should share the group’s general comfort level so Bryan can plan the pace, setup, and amount of hands-on practice.
Can family members attend?+
Yes. Intergenerational sessions can be especially useful because family members learn the same safety language and can keep practicing together.
What should participants bring?+
For hands-on sessions, a charged phone, tablet, or laptop is helpful. Bryan will confirm account and device details with the host before the program.