How AI is giving Northern Ireland teachers time back

Google DeepMind Blog News

Summary

Google reports on a six-month pilot program in Northern Ireland where 100 teachers used Gemini and NotebookLM to save an average of 10 hours per week on administrative tasks. The initiative highlights how AI tools are being integrated into classrooms to personalize learning and support educators rather than replace them.

A six-month long pilot program with the Northern Ireland Education Authority’s C2k initiative found that integrating Gemini and other generative AI tools saved participating teachers an average of 10 hours per week.
Original Article Export to Word Export to PDF
View Cached Full Text

Cached at: 05/08/26, 09:43 AM

# How AI is giving Northern Ireland teachers time back Source: [https://blog.google/innovation-and-ai/models-and-research/google-deepmind/ai-classroom-northern-ireland/](https://blog.google/innovation-and-ai/models-and-research/google-deepmind/ai-classroom-northern-ireland/) ![Rowandale Primary School teacher assisting two primary school students working on laptops at a classroom table.](https://storage.googleapis.com/gweb-uniblog-publish-prod/images/rach.width-200.format-webp.webp) What happens when you put powerful new technology directly into the hands of 100 teachers? An incredible six\-month pilot program in Northern Ireland gave us the answer: they steer it in ways that are truly inspiring\. I had the privilege of meeting educators and administrators from the Northern Ireland Education Authority’s[C2k](https://www.education-ni.gov.uk/articles/digital-transformation-schools)program who had the opportunity to integrate Gemini and Google Workspace tools into their classrooms, and I was struck by the teachers’ ingenuity and the efficiencies they were able to achieve\. The success of the pilot program is a result of a close partnership between C2k and Google for Education — Google brought the technology, and teachers utilized it to make a meaningful impact\. Their work underscores our core belief: AI is not a replacement for learning or teachers\. It is a collaborative tool — and[when grounded in learning science](https://blog.google/outreach-initiatives/education/google-learnlm-gemini-generative-ai/), it can make learning more accessible, handle time\-consuming related tasks, and free educators to do what only they can uniquely do\. ### More than just efficient admin While it’s still early, the results are inspiring\. Each participating teacher[reported saving an average of 10 hours per week](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oouEQqwiqWw)with the help of Gemini, which is[infused with learning science principles](https://blog.google/outreach-initiatives/education/google-gemini-learnlm-update/)\. The teachers were then able to reinvest that time into student engagement and their own professional development\. The pilot captured more than 600 unique use cases for Gemini, ranging from streamlining administrative work to brainstorming more engaging content\. It's been incredible to see such teachers identify diverse use cases once they feel empowered to explore how Gemini can help\. For Chris Lowe, Head of Information and Communication Technology \(ICT\) at Ashfield Boys’ High School, the impact was immediate\. “The time I saved using Gemini fundamentally allows me to do the job I want to do — and that is to teach\.” Chris uses Gemini to draft letters to parents or create risk assessments for class outings, and NotebookLM to turn curriculum material into podcasts for exam preparation\. ![High school teacher overseeing students working at desktop computers in a classroom.](https://storage.googleapis.com/gweb-uniblog-publish-prod/images/chrisr.width-100.format-webp.webp) ### Personalizing learning and removing barriers Beyond administrative tasks, teachers used Gemini to help create lessons in the Irish language and create more inclusive learning environments\. Alistair Hamill, Head of Geography from Lurgan College, used NotebookLM’s MindMap feature to create interactive visual representations of source material\. He noted that this helped a neurodivergent student see the "big picture" rather than getting stuck in the details\. Similarly, one ICT coordinator at[Rowandale Primary School](https://www.rowandaleips.co.uk/)found new ways to inspire her students\. For her creative writing class, she used Gemini to generate images and spark curiosity\. It also became a vital tool for inclusivity: “I can tell Gemini to help me create a lesson \[tailored\] to suit a student’s specific needs and that has been game\-changing,” she said\. ![Lila Ibrahim and a young female student in a classroom, looking at a laptop while reviewing the student’s creative writing assignment.](https://storage.googleapis.com/gweb-uniblog-publish-prod/images/Copy_of_Belfast_School_2025.width-100.format-webp.webp) ### Embracing the opportunity ahead, responsibly We believe the promise of AI in education can only be achieved by developing it responsibly\. One essential facet of this is doing so in close partnership with the entire education ecosystem\. When my team and I met with Damian Harvey, Interim Head of C2k, he emphasized this point\. He shared that the pilot’s success was accelerated by a collaborative group of teachers sharing their learnings with each other, as well as the need for resources to train and support further development in AI readiness\. “I believe educators need to embrace the opportunity,” said Damian Harvey, Interim Head of C2k\. Following the success of the pilot, C2k plans to roll out Gemini training to more teachers across Northern Ireland\. We believe this is just the beginning\. We hope to continue exploring partnerships like this, learning directly from the teachers who use the technology how to best align products with proven pedagogical principles , and how to effectively integrate the technology to improve learning outcomes for students\. As we continue to navigate the shift toward AI in learning, it's critical that our products empower educators, not replace them\. Teachers must maintain ownership over how AI is used to help their students learn\. As I’ve often said: technology isn’t magic, teachers are\. Learn more about[how other institutions are using Gemini](https://blog.google/outreach-initiatives/education/emea-universities-and-schools-transforming-education-with-the-help-of-google-ai/), or[get started yourself](https://edu.google.com/intl/ALL_uk/ai/gemini-for-education/)\. ### Related stories

Similar Articles

These 8 AI Tools Will Save You 1000 Hours in 2026

YouTube AI Channels

Eight AI tools—Google AI Studio, Zapier, Nano Banana Pro, Higgsfield, Granola, Wispr Flow, NotebookLM and Pinokio—save the author 1,000+ hours yearly by enabling rapid prototyping, graphics, video, automation, dictation and knowledge management.

Working with 400,000 teachers to shape the future of AI in schools

OpenAI Blog

OpenAI and the American Federation of Teachers launch the National Academy for AI Instruction, a five-year initiative to train 400,000 K-12 educators (about 1 in 10 US teachers) in AI usage and integration in classrooms. OpenAI is contributing $10 million in funding and resources, with support from Microsoft, Anthropic, and the United Federation of Teachers.

Teaching with AI

OpenAI Blog

OpenAI shares perspectives from educators on integrating AI tools like ChatGPT into teaching, including using AI for language support and teaching students to think critically about AI-generated information.

Using GPT-4 to improve teaching and learning in Brazil

OpenAI Blog

Arco Educação, Brazil's largest educational operating system, is partnering with OpenAI to launch the Teacher Assistant, an AI tool powered by GPT-4 that helps teachers create personalized lesson plans for students with diverse learning needs, significantly reducing time spent on administrative tasks and lesson planning.

SchoolAI builds an AI platform that empowers teachers

OpenAI Blog

SchoolAI launches an AI platform built on OpenAI models that empowers teachers with real-time student progress signals and provides personalized learning support through conversational assistants (Dot) and AI tutors (Sidekick), reaching 1 million classrooms across 80+ countries in two years.