The English schools looking to dispel ‘doom and gloom’ around AI
Artificial Intelligence technology is being employed to recreate the historical figure Charles Darwin discussing the topic of evolution. This innovative approach to education has also been used to reimagine the town of Luton as a car. Teachers have reported that these creative methods have resulted in increased engagement from students. They believe that presenting information in such a unique way helps to foster interest and improve understanding. Educational experts agree that integrating AI in such a manner holds great potential for the future of learning.

AI Invading Schools Across England
Charles Darwin chatting with students about evolution, primary school pupils seeing their writing transformed into images, Luton reimagined as a cool automobile – artificial intelligence is invading schools across England in surprising ways. While Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, in January called for a “digital revolution” involving AI in schools, it has already begun in places such as Willowdown primary school in Bridgwater, Somerset.
Matt Cave, Willowdown’s head teacher, said his pupils improve their descriptive writing by feeding their work into an AI client to generate images. “All of a sudden they’ve got all these pictures from different people’s descriptions, and they can then discuss with their classmates whether that was the image they expected to be in the reader’s head,” Cave said. “It was really stimulating and thought-provoking for them to have a different audience.”
The Impact of AI in Education
The results, according to Cave, have been “brilliant” and a contrast to the “doom and gloom” he had heard from worried school leaders. “I wouldn’t want anyone to think we weren’t aware of the potential hazards – we emphasise that to the children continually. But it’s going to be a tool that they are going to need to use all their lives,” Cave said.
“In Bridgwater we’ve got Hinkley Point being built , the new nuclear power station, and Gravity, which is a massive gigafactory for batteries for Jaguar Land Rover. That’s all going to be hi-tech businesses and children are going to need to know this stuff to get on with employment in the local area.”
Using AI for Interactive Learning
Marina Wyatt, head of science for key stage 3 at Furze Platt senior school in Maidenhead, said that she has found teacher-led use of AI useful for engaging students in discussions, including with a virtual Charles Darwin.
“We prompt the AI before we take the class – we tell it: ‘Imagine you are Charles Darwin, you have students from a science class who are interested in your experience around the world, they particularly want to know about the theory of evolution, natural selection, variation and inheritance.’ “In the prompt we tell it to respond as Charles Darwin, and stay in the role. And it works. It came up with some brilliant stuff.
Concerns About AI and Learning
Daisy Christodoulou, head of education for No More Marking, a firm adapting technology for classroom assessments, said the exciting uses of AI and large language models (LLMs) came with concerns about the effects on how pupils learn.
“The first problem – and most fundamental problem – is a basic principle from cognitive science: learning is not performance,” Christodoulou said. “What this means is that the fundamental underpinning skills and knowledge you need to become an expert user of LLMs – or indeed any modern technology – are often not best acquired simply by playing around with the technology.”
Teaching the Uses and Pitfalls of AI
Emma Darcy, director of technology for learning at Denbigh high school in Luton, said the uses and pitfalls of AI were taught in weekly “digital character” classes for year 7 pupils. “After the explosion of ChatGPT two years ago, we didn’t want to wait for official guidance to come out because we knew we needed to be having those conversations with our staff and students,” Darcy said.
But the school has enabled controlled use of AI in some cases, utilising Canva graphic design software. “We did a big project with the whole school around presenting positive images of Luton and we asked the students to use Canva to help generate an image of a car representing Luton and the Luton community,” Darcy said. “But what we were actually teaching was language and literacy skills, what a good prompt would look like and image generation. What we don’t do is send students directly on to an LLM – it needs to be done with a clear learning objective and purpose.”