While educators also said managing such mental and behavioral struggles among their students is the biggest difficulty they experience (45%), they seem skeptical that AI will help them address these challenges. Educators ranked supporting students’ mental health and social skill development among the issues that have the lowest potential for AI to have a positive impact, according to the survey of over 1,300 K-12 and higher education educators in 19 countries, including the U.S., Canada, and in Europe, Latin America, Asia and the Middle East, conducted by Morning Consult on behalf of McGraw Hill.
"For the second year in a row, educators around the world and across education levels are saying the most significant obstacles they and their students are facing are those that extend beyond the classroom,” said Simon Allen, CEO of McGraw Hill. “While AI offers new tools to enhance learning, the biggest challenges in education are highly persistent and won’t be solved overnight. That’s why it’s crucial that we continue to listen to what educators are saying so we can identify meaningful solutions to empower their work and address these ongoing challenges."
How AI is having the greatest impact for educators
The survey also found the use of AI in education is on the rise globally. Two-thirds (68%) of educators say they currently use generative AI (GenAI) in their roles or expect to within the next year. Though claimed U.S. K-12 and higher education educators rank among the lowest globally for AI adoption, use among both groups has increased over the last year. Meanwhile, educators across regions and grade levels estimate roughly half (47%) of their students are using AI for schoolwork.
Despite doubts from educators about AI’s ability to address their biggest challenges, its growing use is revealing meaningful ways the technology is being used to enhance teaching and support student learning.
- When it comes to areas in which AI can have a positive impact on students, educators see the greatest potential for AI in language translation (1st), preparing students for career readiness (2nd), and helping them improve grades and test scores (3rd).
- For AI’s impact on educators themselves, the potential to save time on administrative work and the opportunity to personalize learning are top ranked (1st — tie), in addition to avoiding burnout (3rd).
Among educators who said that GenAI saved them time (59%), the median time savings was 3–5 hours per week. However, educators don’t seem to connect those time savings to more time to tackle the social-emotional or student engagement support they struggle to adequately provide.