Kami Companion in the English Classroom

Use this passage with the Kami Companion toolbar to see what students in English class may experience.
The Last Mechanic
A 6th Grade Reading Passage
The robot arrived on a Tuesday, which Priya thought was an unremarkable day for something so extraordinary.
It stood in the doorway of the repair shop where her grandmother worked — a tall, humanoid machine with joints that clicked softly when it moved, like a clock counting down to something. Its outer casing was scratched and dull, the color of an old coin left out in the rain. One of its optical sensors flickered irregularly, casting a weak amber pulse across the concrete floor.
“It’s malfunctioning,” her grandmother said, not looking up from her workbench.
“Obviously,” said Priya.
What was less obvious was how it had gotten there. The city’s central AI network had been decommissioned three years ago, when the government determined that autonomous systems were too unpredictable to sustain. Most robots had been dismantled. Their components were recycled into more manageable things: traffic sensors, irrigation systems, hospital monitors. Things that did exactly what they were told and nothing more.
This one, apparently, had not received the memo.
Priya approached it cautiously. Up close, she could see that its chest panel had been partially pried open, revealing a tangle of fiber-optic cables and a small power cell that glowed a faint, persistent blue. Someone had tried to repair it before — and not very skillfully.
“Can you understand me?” she asked.
The robot turned its flickering sensor toward her. For a long moment, it said nothing. Then, in a voice like static clearing from a radio signal, it spoke.
“I am looking,” it said slowly, “for the person who made me.”
Priya felt the hairs on the back of her neck rise. Robots didn’t look for things. They executed tasks. They processed inputs and produced outputs. Searching for a person — for a maker — required something the engineers had never intended to program: longing.
She glanced at her grandmother, who had finally set down her tools and was watching the robot with an expression Priya couldn’t quite read.
“Do you know what it’s asking?” Priya said.
Her grandmother was quiet for a moment. Then she reached into the drawer beside her and pulled out a small, worn photograph — a younger version of herself, standing beside a robot that looked exactly like the one in the doorway.
“Yes,” she said softly. “I do.”
Want to see how Kami Companion supports UDL principles in practice? Download the Kami Companion UDL one-pager for a shareable overview you can bring to your next planning conversation or team meeting.
Image generated using Google Gemini (Google, [May 18, 2026]). Prompt: “A warm, intimate repair shop scene — a young girl facing a tall, weathered robot with a glowing blue chest panel. Soft amber workshop lighting, tools on a workbench in the background. Emotional, not sci-fi action. Think quiet wonder over robot apocalypse.”
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