Why it matters · the evidence

Children are racing into AI. The world is racing too.

Pupils have adopted artificial intelligence faster than any tool in a generation. At the same time, the US and China are rebuilding their economies around it. The question for every parent, teacher and policymaker is the same: are we equipping young people to lead in that world — or just to be shaped by it?

Pupils
92%

of UK university students now use AI in some form — up from 66% just a year earlier.

Their teachers
74%

of UK teachers have had no formal training in how to use or teach AI — though 56% say they want it.

Sources: HEPI Student Generative AI Survey 2025 · GoStudent Future of Education 2025

Where the gap opens

A widening gap at every stage of education.

01 · Primary
The early-years cliff
8%

of pupils in the earliest years receive any formal AI literacy lessons…

80%

…compared with older secondary pupils. Foundations are skipped at the very age habits form.

02 · Secondary
Use without judgement
8 in 10

UK 13–18s now use AI for schoolwork — up from fewer than 4 in 10 in 2023.

32%

feel confident they can spot when AI is giving them misinformation.

03 · Higher
Adoption outruns policy
88%

of students have used generative AI for assessments — up from 53% the year before.

36%

have received any AI-skills training from their institution, though 67% call it essential.

Sources: National Literacy Trust 2024 · OUP 2025 · HEPI 2025 · Digital Education Council

The global race · economics

AI is now a national economy — not just a technology.

Two superpowers are reorganising their economies around artificial intelligence, at a scale that dwarfs anything in recent memory. This is the world today's pupils will graduate into — and the stakes of getting their education right.

United States
$410bn

poured into AI by US businesses in 2025 — with $660–700bn projected for 2026.

~1.1%

of US GDP growth in early 2025 came from AI-related investment — briefly outpacing the American consumer as the engine of the economy.

One Federal Reserve analysis credited AI-related spending with as much as 39% of US growth in the first nine months of 2025 — though economists still debate the true net figure once imported chips are counted.

China
¥1.2tn

(~$174bn) — the value of China's core AI industry in 2025, spread across more than 6,200 AI companies.

54% CAGR

growth in core AI revenue from 2023–2025. AI-related industries are projected to top ¥10 trillion by 2030.

China now files more than half the world's AI patents, hosts 47% of its top AI researchers — and has already made AI literacy mandatory in schools.

70%+

of all global AI investment now flows into just two countries — the United States and China. Whichever way the next decade tilts, the generation in school today inherits the result.

Sources: J.P. Morgan & St. Louis Fed 2025–26 · Goldman Sachs · China Ministry of Industry & Information Technology 2025 · CCID 2026 · Morgan Stanley "China — AI" 2025 · Nature

What it means · the next decade

Our children will compete in an AI economy. Most aren't being prepared for it.

The economic race above isn't an abstraction — it sets the job market, the wages and the industries today's pupils will spend their lives in. Other nations are treating AI literacy as national infrastructure. The clearest early signal is how confident their young people already feel.

Share of students who feel excited and equipped to learn with AI — a proxy for how confidently each education system has embraced it.

China
80%
United Kingdom
38%
United States
35%
95%

of secondary schools in China report daily use of AI-assisted learning platforms. There, AI is part of the mandatory curriculum.

5 nations

South Korea, Estonia, China, Singapore & Germany now embed AI literacy as a national priority. The UK has no equivalent statutory framework.

Sources: Digital Education Council · SQ Magazine 2025 · Tony Blair Institute, "Generation Ready" 2025–26 · China Ministry of Education

The hidden cost · cognition

The risk isn't that children use AI. It's that they stop thinking.

Speed and competitiveness are only half the story. A growing body of research warns that leaning on AI too early — and without judgement — can quietly erode the very skills education exists to build. The findings are early, but they point the same way.

MIT Media Lab · 2025

"Your Brain on ChatGPT"

Over four months, students who wrote essays with ChatGPT showed the lowest brain engagement on EEG, weaker memory recall, and less ownership of their own work than those who wrote unaided. The lead author's warning: "developing brains are at the highest risk."

Gerlich · Societies · 2025

The cognitive-offloading effect

A study of 666 people found frequent AI use was negatively correlated with critical-thinking ability — and the effect was strongest in 17–25-year-olds. The mechanism: "cognitive offloading," where we hand our thinking to the tool and practise it less ourselves.

Microsoft & Carnegie Mellon · 2025

Confidence cuts both ways

In a survey of 319 knowledge workers, the more people trusted the AI, the less critical thinking they applied to its output. Confidence in the tool, not in their own judgement, became the default.

This is exactly the gap literacy closes.

None of this means keeping AI away from children. It means teaching them to use it and keep thinking — to question, verify and stay in the lead. A child who understands AI stays in control of it.

Sources: Kos'myna et al., MIT Media Lab 2025 · Gerlich, "AI Tools in Society," Societies 15(1) 2025 · Lee et al., Microsoft Research & Carnegie Mellon, CHI 2025

The habits this generation forms with AI are being set right now.

Adoption is near-universal. Literacy is not. You & AI exists to close that gap — free, safe, and built to keep the human in the loop.

The bottom line

A generation racing into AI deserves to be the one steering it.

Join the movement →