AI in schools: the fastest route to a more resilient and skilled workforce
Date:
Mon, 27 Apr 2026 10:45:45 +0000
Description:
Early AI education is vital to close skills gaps and unlock UK growth.
FULL STORY ======================================================================Copy link Facebook X Whatsapp Reddit Pinterest Flipboard Threads Email Share this article 0 Join the conversation Follow us Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Tech Radar Pro Are you a pro? Subscribe to our newsletter Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed! Become a Member in Seconds Unlock instant access to exclusive member features. Contact me with news and offers from other Future brands Receive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsors By submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over. You are
now subscribed Your newsletter sign-up was successful Join the club Get full access to premium articles, exclusive features and a growing list of member rewards. Explore An account already exists for this email address, please log in. Subscribe to our newsletter In late January 2026, the UKs Departments for Education and Science, Innovation and Technology announced they are running a tender for the tech sector to co-create AI tutoring tools with teachers.
The desired outputs are safe AI-powered tutoring tools that will provide personalized, one-to-one learning support for up to 450,000 children from disadvantaged backgrounds. Robbie Jerrom Social Links Navigation
Senior Principal Technologist for AI at Red Hat. With disadvantaged children on average lagging behind their peers (just one in four are currently achieving a pass in English and mathematics at GCSE at grade 5 or above, compared with over half of their peers), one-to-one tutoring, which can accelerate learning by around five months on average, is seen as a key solution. Article continues below You may like Why early-career investment
and AI training matter for tackling the productivity crisis The AI gap nobody's talking about Why hands-on digital skills will define the value of
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But access to tutoring is highly unequal.
The UK Government's recognition that AI-powered tools, complementing face-to-face teaching, could be a solution to this challenge is powerful.
This is just one example of the power of AI for good within education, but it touches on a wider conversation.
AI will no doubt help transform education for the better, but its critical that children are also taught how to use AI tools effectively, innovatively and ethically. This is for their own benefit, but also for the good of the future workforce and society. The 400 billion AI adoption opportunity AI has rapidly become integral to business operations and shows no signs of slowing down. Yet this fast pace of change is causing challenges for businesses - technology departments in particular. Are you a pro? Subscribe to our newsletter Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed! Contact me
with news and offers from other Future brands Receive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsors By submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.
A recent survey uncovered that 62% of IT professionals said there was an urgent AI skills gap, with agentic AI skills most in demand (55%). If solved, analysis cited in the Government's AI Opportunities Action Plan suggests effective AI adoption across sectors and careers could inject 400 billion
into the economy by 2030.
Rapid AI upskilling of the working adult population is an immediate requirement in this environment (as seen by the Governments free AI foundations training available for all UK adults).
Reflecting this need further, new research from Randstad unveiled that job
ads requiring AI agent skills grew by 1,587% throughout 2025. But we cant
just focus on the now. Investment into the future workforce is also critical for the UKs long-term success, and upskilling cannot start at the point of employment. What to read next Inside the NSF plan to prepare American workers for an AI-driven economy Closing AI learning gaps between leaders and employees Why AIs investment must materialize for the C-Suite Early AI education, widened opportunities As many will have seen in their own workplace, younger employees who have grown up with technology are more agile and can learn on the fly. But AI can also set their career path in flux, making them feel like theyre fighting the change rather than progressing naturally.
The fastest way to overcome this hurdle is to show how AI can help them level up more quickly. Businesses have a responsibility to invest in upskilling junior staff, but I believe AI capability should also be prioritized much earlier.
Supporting children to develop their AI skills at school can lower barriers
to access and understanding, and benefit their future careers accordingly. Outcomes of this can be better digital literacy overall, enhanced
adaptability and flexibility, and even the creation of brand new job roles as new skills enter the workforce and drive innovation.
Basic skills and AI ethics (such as effective prompting, applying critical thinking to evaluate AI responses and ensuring a human in the loop when delivering AI outputs) are important to develop, but so too are AI innovation and creativity.
Providing children with real-world problems to solve through AI can be an effective way to inspire and nurture future talent, encouraging them to
engage with innovative technologies and explore their potential.
Events like the Teens in AI International Women's Day Global Techathon last year is an example of this, encouraging applicants to apply emerging AI technologies to challenges referenced in the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. Teaching critical thinking alongside AI A counterargument to developing early AI skills is that it could impact children's ability to develop critical thinking and emotional intelligence. Namely, if children use AI to solve problems they wont learn how to do so themselves.
In my view, however, theres no reason why these skills couldnt be developed alongside AI understanding. In fact, encouraging children to question, fact check, and challenge AI responses can help make them more resilient, critical thinkers across every part of their lives and careers.
If were serious about the long-term impacts of AI technology, we have to go further than deploying tools: we must teach children how to use AI effectively, ethically and critically.
If we do this correctly, AI in education won't replace teaching or diminish thinking. It will sharpen it. By embedding critical thinking into how we
teach children to use AI, we protect and strengthen core skills like reasoning, fact-checking and resilience, while preparing young people for a labor market already reshaped by AI.
That's how the UK realizes the full economic and societal benefits of responsible AI adoption: not just by deploying the tools, but by developing the minds that know how to question them. We've featured the best coding for kids. This article was produced as part of TechRadar Pro Perspectives , our channel to feature the best and brightest minds in the technology industry today.
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