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Last Updated on 30th April 2026

Reading Time: 2.4 mins

April 30, 2026

Statistically, half the children in your classroom were using AI last year. Ofcom found that 50% of 8-17-year-olds claimed to use AI, with a significant increase in those using it for learning and schoolwork.

But it’s not just the students. The AI revolution has moved into the staffroom too. From 2023 to 2025, the percentage of teachers who said they had used AI has almost doubled, rising from 3 in 10 to 6 in 10. (National Literacy Trust)

50%

Of 8–17-year-olds claimed to use AI, with a significant increase in those using it for learning and schoolwork.

Source: Ofcom

6 in 10

Teachers said they had used AI, almost double the 3 in 10 who said the same in 2023.

With AI now part of daily life for half of pupils and teachers, this is not a futuristic talking point but a shared reality in today’s education. It raises the question, what are teachers missing if they don’t understand the tools their students or colleagues are already mastering?

As teachers and professionals, it’s not always easy to know how to approach AI in the classroom.

  • How do you talk about it with pupils, or set clear guidelines, when things are changing so quickly?
  • How do you encourage safe and responsible use without it becoming a substitute for thinking for themselves?
  • What ways are there for teachers to empower themselves with AI to provide dynamic teaching materials, deliver specialised support and reduce the ever-growing workload?

91%

A survey from April 2026 revealed a staggering 91% of NI teachers surveyed are experiencing moderate to high work-related burnout. With that in mind, AI’s potential as a workload reliever and a time-saving tool is compelling, or perhaps, a valuable tool for improving teacher wellbeing.

Source: CREATE at DCU

To support you in answering these questions and to inform you on the risks and opportunities which AI provides today, you can join our comprehensive training, designed for professionals like you. We’re covering the good, the bad and the need-to-know including data considerations and the implications of banning AI usage in education.

Artificial Intelligence in Education

Understanding Risks and Opportunities

Join us on Thursday, 7th May or Tuesday, 16th June at (3:45pm – 4:45pm) for our live webinar, ‘Artificial Intelligence in Education: Understanding Risks and Opportunities’.

If you are a teacher, educator or safeguarding professional in Northern Ireland and your school is registered for Safer Schools NI, this training is provided completely free of charge to your whole staff team due to our partnership with the Department of Education.

Register here for crucial information and practical steps to equip your team with the tools to manage AI risks and opportunities effectively.

*Training webinars are free of charge for staff members whose school is registered with Safer Schools NI. Not registered? Join the Safer Schools community today!

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2026-04-30T11:43:58+00:00
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