Displaying 1 - 10 / 59 results
Blog
Blog
15/05/2026
State of the Nation: AI in Education - What Educators Need to Know
AI is rapidly reshaping education, with growing teacher and student use outpacing policy, training, and safeguarding. Schools now face urgent questions around equity, literacy, and governance.
Blog
12/05/2026
What the 2026 Teacher Recruitment Report Means for Computing Teachers
New teacher recruitment data shows fewer vacancies don’t mean schools are better staffed. For computing teachers, especially in primary, workload and non-specialist teaching remain major concerns.
Blog
29/04/2026
Digitally Native or Digitally Naïve? What the Latest Research Means for Teachers
Students use tech widely but lack critical skills. Digital literacy = using tech safely, creatively, and critically. Embed it across subjects and improve teacher training.
Blog
26/03/2026
Why Your Students Still Need to Learn to Program (Even with AI)
AI can now write code — but does that mean students are learning less? This blog explores new research and what it means for how we teach programming.
Blog
09/03/2026
AI Is Changing Work, Not Just Replacing It: What the Anthropic Report Means for Schools
Recent research from Anthropic analysing how people use its AI assistant Claude AI suggests that artificial intelligence is more often supporting workers than replacing them. Instead of automating entire jobs, AI is typically used to help complete specific tasks such as writing, coding, or analysing information.
For teachers, this highlights the importance of developing students’ critical thinking, problem solving and subject understanding, so they can evaluate and improve AI-generated work. For students studying computing, strong technical foundations remain essential, but they will increasingly need to work alongside AI tools in professional environments. The report also reinforces the growing importance of digital and AI literacy, helping young people understand how AI systems work, recognise their limitations, and use them responsibly in future careers.
Blog
25/11/2025
Cybersecurity and privacy, it’s everyone’s business
Join us at King's for an in-person lecture, introducing young people to this vital aspect of computer science. Attendees will have the chance to explore what cybersecurity is, and why its important.
Blog
09/10/2025
System Upgrade Required: What the Royal Society’s New Report Means for Computing Teachers
The Royal Society’s new report, System Upgrade Required, shines a light on the urgent need to strengthen computing in UK schools — from tackling the gender gap to supporting teachers and improving access to tech.
This blog unpacks the key findings, what they mean for your classroom, and how teachers can help ensure every child gets the opportunity to thrive in our digital world.
Blog
24/09/2025
What Every Teacher Should Know: Key Insights from Microsoft’s 2025 AI in Education Report
Microsoft’s 2025 AI in Education Report shows that AI is rapidly becoming part of everyday teaching and learning, with students and teachers using it to plan lessons, support learning, and cut workload. While AI offers real potential for personalisation, equity, and improved outcomes, gaps remain in teacher training, digital literacy, and clear policies for safe, ethical use. The report urges schools to move beyond ad hoc adoption by embedding AI into professional learning, co-creating usage guidelines with students, and aligning tools with their educational goals. For teachers, the key takeaway is that AI works best as a partner—not a replacement—when thoughtfully integrated into classroom practice.
Blog
03/09/2025
Picking Ourselves Up: Supporting Each Other After Tough Exam Results
02/09/2025
A Shared Challenge: What Computing Can Learn from the IOP Physics Report
The blog post discusses the shortage of computer science teachers in the UK, highlighting how this issue disproportionately affects students from disadvantaged backgrounds. The article points out that schools in poorer areas are less likely to offer computer science A-levels, which can limit students' access to high-paying careers in the tech industry. It suggests that this teacher shortage is a significant barrier to social mobility.
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