Google Announces Plan to Bring AI Training to All US Teachers

Insider Brief

  • Google is partnering with ISTE+ASCD to deliver AI training to roughly 6 million U.S. educators, using short modular courses and micro-credentials to accelerate classroom adoption of Gemini and NotebookLM.
  • The program emphasizes practical classroom use cases and aligns with the “AI Ready Graduate” framework, which defines six student roles designed to move schools beyond basic AI literacy toward applied, collaborative and creative use of AI.
  • The initiative builds on Google’s broader education push, including a $1 billion U.S. skills pledge, and new Gemini-powered Classroom features, with rollout expected in the coming months and potential reach of more than 74 million students.

Google is expanding its push into AI-enabled education through a nationwide training initiative aimed at educators, partnering with ISTE+ASCD to deliver AI training to roughly 6 million K–12 teachers and higher-education faculty across the U.S.

The company said the latest Google for Education program is designed to help educators, through Gemini and NotebookLM, in their classrooms as AI adoption accelerates and pressure mounts on schools and universities to integrate generative AI while also addressing concerns that many teachers lack practical guidance.

“Existing AI training initiatives often require hours of time, and they don’t always clearly show how teachers can use what they’ve learned to help their students,” Google’s VP and General Manager of Education Chris Phillips wrote in a company blog post announcing the initiative. “We believe that for AI to be truly impactful in schools, educators need to lead the way.”

According to Google, training will be delivered through short, modular sessions built by educators and focused on immediate classroom application. Participants will earn micro-credentials intended to signal AI literacy with Google’s tools.

Topics will include:

  • Creating personalized lessons for individual students based on same-day assessment results.
  • Using Gemini to provide each student in large lecture settings with an individualized study coach.
  • Adapting existing curricular materials to meet diverse student needs, including reading levels, primary languages and learning styles.
  • Using NotebookLM to help students generate customized study guides, infographics and interactive podcasts tailored to how they learn best.

Under the partnership, ISTE+ASCD will help shape curriculum aligned with its “AI Ready Graduate” framework and educator standards. The framework argues students must learn to work creatively and strategically with AI — not just understand it — to succeed in an AI-integrated future.

The framework identifies six core roles for students using AI:

  • Learner: Uses AI to set goals, plan skill development, get unstuck and obtain targeted feedback.
  • Researcher: Leverages AI to investigate topics, evaluate claims and compare multiple sources critically.
  • Synthesizer: Uses AI to remix and adapt information across formats and complexity levels for different audiences.
  • Problem Solver: Treats AI as a brainstorming partner to generate ideas and explore alternative perspectives.
  • Connector: Applies AI to strengthen human collaboration, including translation, team formation and workflow coordination.
  • Storyteller: Uses AI to communicate complex ideas through multimodal content such as text, images, audio and video.

“As AI changes how we work and how we learn, we must prioritize supporting educators to keep pace with these changes,” noted ISTE+ASCD CEO Richard Culatta in Google’s blog post. “Too many teachers tell us they’re being asked to navigate AI without the training to use it effectively.”

According to Google, the rollout is expected to begin in the coming months with the initiative potentially impacting more than 74 million students through trained educators. In the meantime, interested educators can find out more by completing a form through Google.

Google framed the program as part of its broader education strategy. In 2024, Google CEO Sundar Pichai at the UN Summit of the Future announced a $120 million Global AI Opportunity Fund aimed at expanding AI education and training worldwide to avoid a widening global AI divide.

In August of last year, Google announced it was offering eligible college students in several countries free access to its AI Pro plan while committing $1 billion over three years to support AI education, workforce training and research in the United States.

Last month, Google introduced a Gemini-powered audio lesson feature in Google Classroom for teachers to generate podcast-style instructional content aimed at improving student engagement and comprehension.

Greg Bock

Greg Bock is an award-winning investigative journalist with more than 25 years of experience in print, digital, and broadcast news. His reporting has spanned crime, politics, business and technology, earning multiple Keystone Awards and a Pennsylvania Association of Broadcasters honors. Through the Associated Press and Nexstar Media Group, his coverage has reached audiences across the United States.

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