AI in Education: 75+ Verified Statistics for 2026
Every number on this page traces to a named study, government report, or industry survey. We link to the original source so you can verify each claim yourself.
KEY NUMBERS
Six statistics every educator should know
60%
of US K-12 teachers used AI tools for their work in 2024-25
Gallup / Walton Family Foundation, Teaching for Tomorrow (Spring 2025)
5.9 hrs
saved per week by teachers who use AI weekly, equal to ~6 weeks per school year
Gallup / Walton Family Foundation (Spring 2025)
1.5x
more likely to fail in lecture vs. active learning (meta-analysis of 225 STEM studies)
Freeman et al., PNAS (2014)
86%
of higher education students globally have used AI in their studies
Digital Education Council Global AI Student Survey (2024)
57%
of US teachers had received no formal AI training as of fall 2024
EdWeek Research Center (Fall 2024)
527%
year-over-year growth in AI-driven referral traffic to websites (Jan-May 2024 vs. 2025)
Previsible / Search Engine Land (2025)
ADOPTION
AI Adoption in K-12 Schools
AI adoption among US K-12 teachers grew rapidly between the 2023-24 and 2024-25 school years. According to a Gallup survey of 2,232 teachers, 60% used AI in 2024-25, with weekly users reporting time savings equivalent to six weeks per school year. Globally, OECD TALIS 2024 data from 280,000 educators across 55 systems found 37% of lower-secondary teachers had used generative AI for work tasks.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| US K-12 teachers who used AI tools for work in 2024-25 | 60% |
| US K-12 teachers who used AI at least weekly | 32% |
| Hours saved per week by teachers who use AI weekly (~6 weeks per school year) | 5.9 hrs |
| US teachers who used AI specifically for instructional planning in 2023-24 | 25% |
| US school principals who used AI tools for their work in 2023-24 | ~60% |
| Teachers working at a school with a formal AI policy | 19% |
| US teachers who say AI does more harm than good in K-12 education | 25% |
| OECD lower-secondary teachers who used generative AI for work tasks | 37% |
| US teachers (grades 6-12) who used AI in 2024-25 | 85% |
| Top teacher AI uses: lesson prep, worksheets, modifying materials (at least monthly) | 37%, 33%, 28% |
| Teachers who say AI-modified materials are better quality | 64% |
| Teachers who say AI improves their insights on student performance | 61% |
What Teachers Use AI For (% using at least monthly)
STUDENTS
How Students Use AI
Student AI adoption doubled year over year. Pew Research found that 26% of US teens used ChatGPT for schoolwork in 2024, up from 13% in 2023. In higher education, 86% of students globally have used AI in their studies (Digital Education Council, 3,839 students across 16 countries), though 80% say their university support is falling short.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| US teens (ages 13-17) who used ChatGPT for schoolwork in 2024 | 26% |
| US teens who used ChatGPT for schoolwork in 2023 (baseline for doubling) | 13% |
| US teens who use AI chatbots at all (2025); roughly 3 in 10 use them daily | ~67% |
| Teens who say using ChatGPT for research is acceptable vs. for writing essays | 54% vs. 18% |
| Higher education students globally who have used AI in their studies | 86% |
| Higher education students using AI weekly; using daily | 54%; 24% |
| US high school students (grades 9-12) who used AI for school purposes in 2024-25 | 50% |
| College students who have used AI on assignments or exams | 56% |
| Students who say using AI in class makes them feel less connected to their teacher | 50% |
| Higher education students who say university AI support is not meeting expectations | 80% |
WORKLOAD
Teacher Workload and the Promise of AI
Teacher burnout remains a systemic challenge. RAND found that US teachers work an average of 53 hours per week, nine more than comparable professionals, and earn roughly $18,000 less. 44% report feeling burned out always or very often (Gallup/Walton Family Foundation). AI tools show real promise for reducing workload: weekly AI users save nearly six hours per week on lesson preparation and administrative tasks.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Average hours per week US teachers work vs. comparable working adults | 53 hrs vs. 44 hrs |
| Pay gap between US teachers and comparable working adults | ~$18,000 less |
| Teachers who consider their base pay adequate vs. comparable adults | 36% vs. 51% |
| Teachers reporting frequent job-related stress (down from 78% in 2021) | 59% |
| K-12 teachers who feel burned out "always" or "very often" | 44% |
| Teachers satisfied with their workload | 37% |
| Teachers who say mental health negatively impacts teaching; Gen Z teachers (under 27) | 48%; 68% |
| Public school teachers who leave their school or profession each year | ~1 in 6 |
| Teaching positions unfilled or filled by teachers not fully certified | 410,000+ |
| Public schools that had difficulty filling one or more teaching vacancies for 2024-25 | 74% |
| Teaching positions vacant as of October 2024 | 3% |
| Share of teacher tasks that McKinsey estimates AI could automate | 20-40% |
MARKET
The AI Education Market
Market research firms agree that AI in education is growing fast, but disagree significantly on the numbers. Estimates for 2024-25 range from $2.21 billion (MarketsandMarkets) to $6.90 billion (Mordor Intelligence), reflecting different definitions of what counts as "AI in education." We present figures from four major firms so you can compare methodologies and choose the estimate that fits your use case.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Global AI in education market size (2024), projected 2030 size | $5.88B; $32.27B |
| Grand View Research CAGR (2025-2030); North America share | 31.2%; 36% |
| Global market size (2024), projected 2030 size | $2.21B; $5.82B |
| MarketsandMarkets CAGR; North America share | 17.5%; 43% |
| Global market projected by 2035; CAGR | $136.79B; 34.52% |
| US market size (2025), projected 2035 size | $2.01B; $39.83B |
| Global market (2025), projected 2030 size; CAGR | $6.90B; $41.01B; 42.83% |
| Range of 2024-25 estimates across four major research firms | $2.21B to $6.90B |
AI in Education Market Projection, Grand View Research (USD Billions)
OUTCOMES
What the Research Says About Learning Outcomes
The strongest evidence for active learning comes from Freeman et al. (2014), a PNAS meta-analysis of 225 undergraduate STEM studies showing that students in lecture-only courses are 1.5 times more likely to fail. A separate meta-analysis of intelligent tutoring systems (Ma et al., 2014) found an effect size of 0.76 on locally developed tests. AI tutoring shows real promise, but evidence remains early-stage for K-12 specifically.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Students in lecture-only STEM courses more likely to fail vs. active learning | 1.5x |
| Average exam score improvement from active learning vs. lecture (effect size 0.47 SD) | +6 percentage points |
| Number of studies included in the Freeman et al. active learning meta-analysis | 225 |
| Bloom's 2-sigma benchmark: 1-on-1 tutored students outperform 98% of classroom-taught | 2 standard deviations |
| Intelligent Tutoring Systems effect size on locally developed tests (107 effect sizes) | d = 0.76 |
| Intelligent Tutoring Systems effect size vs. teacher-led group instruction | g = 0.42 |
| Khan Academy Khanmigo growth: students using AI tutoring; district partners | 68K to 700K; 45 to 380 |
| Teachers who worry that AI weakens important skills students need | 70% |
TRAINING
The Training Gap: Why Teachers Feel Unprepared
Most teachers are learning AI on their own. As of fall 2024, 57% of US teachers had received no formal AI training (EdWeek). Across the OECD, 75% of teachers who do not use AI cite insufficient knowledge as the primary barrier (TALIS 2024). The gap between well-resourced and under-resourced schools is widening: 67% of low-poverty US districts trained teachers on AI, compared with 39% of high-poverty districts.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| US teachers who had received no AI training as of fall 2024 | 57% |
| US districts that had trained teachers on AI by fall 2024 (up from 23% in 2023) | 48% |
| AI training gap by district poverty: low-poverty vs. high-poverty districts | 67% vs. 39% |
| Schools and universities worldwide with formal AI guidance as of mid-2023 | <10% |
| Higher education institutions that now have or are developing AI guidance | ~2 in 3 |
| OECD teachers who received AI professional development in the past year | 38% |
| Teachers not using AI who cite insufficient knowledge and skills as the barrier | 75% |
| AI training rates by country: Singapore vs. France | 76% vs. 9% |
| Higher education faculty who use AI professionally but feel uncertain about pedagogy | 9 in 10 use AI; over half uncertain |
GLOBAL
AI in Education Around the World
AI adoption varies dramatically by country. OECD TALIS 2024 data shows Singapore and the UAE at roughly 75% teacher AI usage, while France and Japan sit below 20%. Most teacher AI use goes to lesson preparation and content summarization, with assessment lagging behind. UNESCO has supported 58 countries in developing AI competency frameworks since 2024, and the OECD tracks over 1,000 policy initiatives across 69 countries.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| OECD average: lower-secondary teachers using generative AI for work | 37% |
| Teacher AI usage in highest-adoption countries: Singapore and UAE | ~75% |
| Teacher AI usage in lowest-adoption countries: France and Japan | <20% |
| EU average: lower-secondary teachers using AI (22 EU countries) | 32% |
| OECD teachers who worry AI facilitates plagiarism and cheating | 70% |
| Top teacher AI uses globally: summarizing topics, generating lesson plans | 68%, 64% |
| Least common teacher AI uses: assessing/marking, reviewing participation | 26%, 25% |
| Countries UNESCO has supported in designing AI competency frameworks since 2024 | 58 |
| AI policy initiatives tracked by the OECD AI Policy Observatory; countries covered | 1,000+; 69 countries |
Teacher AI Adoption by Country/Region (%, TALIS 2024)
TRAFFIC
AI Search and Referral Traffic
AI-driven referral traffic is growing fast from a tiny base. BrightEdge reports it accounts for less than 1% of total web traffic, but Previsible tracked a 527% year-over-year surge across 19 GA4 properties (Jan-May 2024 vs. 2025). ChatGPT dominates with 84% of AI referral sessions. Meanwhile, zero-click searches rose from 56% to 69% in the year after Google launched AI Overviews (Similarweb).
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| AI referral traffic as a share of total web traffic | <1% |
| ChatGPT share of all AI referral traffic (1.96M LLM sessions tracked) | 84.2% |
| Perplexity share of AI referral traffic; Google Gemini share | 8.6%; 4.5% |
| Year-over-year growth in LLM referral traffic (Jan-May 2024 vs. 2025, 19 GA4 properties) | +527% |
| Zero-click searches before and after Google AI Overviews (May 2024 to May 2025) | 56% to 69% |
| Share of Google AI Overview queries that are informational (early 2025) | 88.1% |
| Google AI Overviews coverage: Jan 2025 vs. Mar 2025 (share of all queries) | 6.49% to 13.14% |
| ChatGPT referral traffic year-over-year growth (Sep-Nov 2025) | +52% |
AI Referral Traffic by Source (Previsible, 2025)
- 84.2%ChatGPT
- 8.6%Perplexity
- 4.5%Gemini
- 2.7%Other
CHANGELOG
How we keep this page current
Publication with 76 verified statistics across 8 sections. Every figure traced to its primary source. Sources: Gallup/WFF, RAND Corporation, Pew Research Center, OECD TALIS 2024, UNESCO, NCES, CDT, Freeman et al. (PNAS), Grand View Research, MarketsandMarkets, Previsible, Semrush, Similarweb, and BrightEdge.
FAQ
Questions teachers ask about AI in education
What percentage of teachers use AI?+
It depends on how broadly you define "use." Gallup found that 60% of US K-12 teachers used AI for work during the 2024-25 school year, with 32% using it weekly (Gallup/Walton Family Foundation, Spring 2025). RAND found a lower figure of 25% when looking specifically at instructional planning in 2023-24. Globally, the OECD TALIS 2024 survey of 280,000 educators found 37% of lower-secondary teachers had used generative AI for work tasks, ranging from 75% in Singapore to under 20% in France.
How is AI being used in K-12 education?+
The most common teacher uses are preparing to teach (37% use AI for this monthly), creating worksheets and activities (33%), and modifying materials to meet student needs (28%), according to Gallup. OECD TALIS 2024 found similar patterns globally: summarizing topics (68%) and generating lesson plans (64%) lead, while assessment and marking (26%) lags behind. Direct student-facing AI tutoring is growing but remains less common than teacher-productivity uses.
Does AI actually improve student learning outcomes?+
The strongest evidence supports active learning broadly, not AI specifically. Freeman et al. (2014) analyzed 225 STEM studies and found students in lecture-only courses are 1.5x more likely to fail, with active learning producing +6% exam score gains. For AI tutoring systems, Ma et al. (2014) found an effect size of 0.76 on locally developed tests. Khan Academy's Khanmigo has scaled to 700,000+ students, but peer-reviewed outcome data is still underway. The evidence is promising but early-stage.
What are the risks of AI in education?+
70% of teachers worry AI weakens important student skills (CDT, 2025). 50% of high school students say AI makes them feel less connected to their teacher. Key risks identified in the research include: equity gaps (39% vs. 67% AI training rates in high- vs. low-poverty districts, per RAND), accuracy (AI models hallucinate facts), and over-reliance on AI for tasks students need to learn to do independently.
How big is the AI education market?+
Market estimates vary widely depending on methodology. For 2024-25, Grand View Research estimates $5.88B (CAGR 31.2% to $32.27B by 2030), while MarketsandMarkets estimates $2.21B (CAGR 17.5% to $5.82B by 2030). Mordor Intelligence puts it at $6.90B. Precedence Research projects the global market could reach $136.79B by 2035. The differences reflect how each firm defines "AI in education."
What training do teachers need to use AI effectively?+
As of fall 2024, 57% of US teachers had received no formal AI training (EdWeek). Across the OECD, 75% of teachers who do not use AI cite insufficient knowledge as the barrier (TALIS 2024). Only 38% of OECD teachers received any AI professional development in the past year. The gap is starkest between countries: 76% of Singapore teachers received AI training vs. just 9% in France.
How much time does AI save teachers?+
Teachers who use AI weekly save an average of 5.9 hours per week on lesson preparation and administrative tasks, equivalent to roughly six weeks over a typical 37.4-week school year (Gallup/Walton Family Foundation, Spring 2025). 64% of these teachers say AI-modified materials are better quality, and 61% say it improves their insights on student performance. McKinsey estimates AI could automate 20-40% of teacher administrative tasks overall.
How many students use AI for school?+
Usage varies by age. Among US teens (13-17), 26% used ChatGPT for schoolwork in 2024, double the 13% in 2023 (Pew Research). Among US high schoolers (9-12), 50% used AI for school-related purposes in 2024-25 (CDT). In higher education, 86% of students globally have used AI, with 54% using it weekly and 24% daily (Digital Education Council, 3,839 students across 16 countries).
See active learning in action
Flip Education turns any curriculum topic into a hands-on classroom mission in under a minute. No planning overhead, no screen time for students.