Skip to main content

Google is bringing AI to the classroom — in a big way

a teacher teaching teens
Google

Google is already incorporating its Gemini AI assistant into the rest of its product ecosystem to help individuals and businesses streamline their existing workflows. Now, the Silicon Valley titan is looking to bring AI into the classroom.

Recommended Videos

While we’ve already seen the damage that teens can do when given access to generative AI, Google argues that it is taking steps to ensure the technology is employed responsibly by students and academic faculty alike.

Following last year’s initial rollout of a teen-safe version of Gemini for personal use, the company at the time decided to not enable the AI’s use with school-issued accounts. That will change in the coming months as Google makes the AI available free of charge to students in over 100 countries though its Google Workspace for Education accounts and school-issued Chromebooks.

Teens that meet Google’s minimum age requirements — they have to be 13 or older in the U.S., 18 or over in the European Economic Area (EEA), Switzerland, Canada, and the U.K. — will be able to converse with Gemini as they would on their personal accounts. That includes access to features like Help me write, Help me read, generative AI backgrounds, and AI-powered noise cancellation. The company was quick to point out that no personal data from this program will be used to train AI models, and that school administrators will be granted admin access to implement or remove features as needed.

What’s more, teens will be able to organize and track their homework assignments through Google Task and Calendar integrations as well as collaborate with their peers using Meet and Assignments.

Google Classroom will also integrate with the school’s Student Information System (SIS), allowing educators to set up classes and import pertinent data such as student lists and grading settings. They’ll also have access to an expanded Google for Education App Hub with 16 new app integrations including Kami, Quizizz, and Screencastify available at launch.

Students will also have access to the Read Along in Classroom feature, which provides them with real-time, AI-based reading help. Conversely, educators will receive feedback from the AI on the student’s reading accuracy, speed, and comprehension.

In the coming months, Google also hopes to introduce the ability for teachers to generate personalized stories tailored to each student’s specific education needs. The feature is currently available in English, with more than 800 books for teachers to choose from, though it will soon offer support for other languages, starting with Spanish.

Additionally, Google is piloting a suite of Gemini in Classroom tools that will enable teachers to “define groups of students in Classroom to assign different content based on each group’s needs.” The recently announced Google Vids, which helps users quickly and easily cut together engaging video clips, will be coming to the classroom as well. A non-AI version of Vids arrives on Google Workspace for Education Plus later this year, while the AI-enhanced version will only be available as a Workspace add-on.

That said, Google has apparently not forgotten just how emotionally vicious teenagers can be. As such, the company is incorporating a number of safety and privacy tools into the new AI system. For example, school administrators will be empowered to prevent students from initiating direct messages and creating spaces to hinder bullying.

Admins will also have the option to block access to Classroom from compromised Android and iOS devices, and can require multiparty approval (i.e. at least two school officials) before security-sensitive changes (like turning off two-step authentication) can be implemented.

Google is introducing a slew of accessibility features as well. Chromebooks will get a new Read Aloud feature in the Chrome browser, for example. Extract Text from PDF will leverage OCR technology to make PDFs accessible to screen readers through the Chrome browser, while the Files app will soon offer augmented image labels to assist screen readers with relaying the contents of images in Chrome.

Later this year, Google also plans to release a feature that will allow users to control their Chromebooks using only their facial expressions and head movements.

These features all sound impressive and should help bring AI into the classroom in a safe and responsible manner — in theory, at least. Though given how quickly today’s teens can exploit security loopholes to bypass their school’s web filters, Google’s good intentions could ultimately prove insufficient.

Andrew Tarantola
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Andrew Tarantola is a journalist with more than a decade reporting on emerging technologies ranging from robotics and machine…
Google is testing a new refresh shortcut for AI Mode
Google AI Mode for Search.

Google’s new AI Mode for search may soon get an update to make the feature easier to navigate after users input a query. 

The Gemini 2.0-powered AI-search function is an elevated search experience, providing a mix of contextual AI Overviews and relevant search links. Currently, Google has made AI Mode available to its Google One AI Premium subscribers as a preview. However, the brand may soon expand availability to free users, while also making it easier to reset an AI Mode conversation and remain on the same page. 

Read more
Google launches Gemini 2.5 Pro, its ‘most intelligent AI model’ yet
Google's Gemini logo with the AI running on a smartphone and a PC.

In a blog post today, Google announced Gemini 2.5 Pro (experimental) for developers and Advanced subscribers, aiming to help you tackle increasingly complex problems. It's the first in the family and set up to "think" before it speaks.

Google says it'll be available today in Google AI Studio (its developer platform) and for Advanced subscribers, with Vertex AI support coming soon. Google also claims to outperform the competition, and that Gemini 2.5 Pro takes the number one spot on the LMArena leaderboard with 18.8%, surpassing other AI models such as ChatGPT and Deepseek.

Read more
Gemini’s rumored video generation could be here soon
Google Gemini on an iPhone.

For several months now, Google Gemini has teased generative video capabilities, but the latest beta suggests those features are closer than ever. In Google app beta 16.11, Android Authority's Abner Li found several strings that reveal a few details about the upcoming video generation features.

The first is a string that says "Get high-quality videos with Veo 2, Gemini's latest video generation model." Veo promises to create an eight-second video in about two minutes based on your idea. All users have to do is describe their vision in a few sentences. Don't get too excited, though; it seems there will be usage limits, so you aren't going to be creating feature-length films just yet.

Read more