Education Endowment Foundation:Can using ChatGPT for lesson planning cut teacher workload?

Can using ChatGPT for lesson planning cut teacher workload?

New EEF trial to see if generative AI can reduce workload and maintain lesson quality
Author
EEF
EEF

A new trial, announced by the Education Endowment Foundation (EEF) today, will explore whether supporting teachers to use ChatGPT – a generative AI tool – for lesson planning can reduce their overall working hours. 

Press Release •3 minutes •

Secondary schools can now sign up to take part in the trial, which is one of the first ever research projects to look at whether ChatGPT can reduce teacher workload, which research shows has a negative impact on staff retention rates in schools.

The trial will find out whether an accessible online guide, designed by Bain & Company’s Social Impact practice and The Hg Foundation, can help teachers make best use of ChatGPT for efficient lesson planning. The toolkit provides technical support to use generative AI to:

  • generate activity ideas;
  • tailor existing lesson materials to specific groups of children;
  • produce clear explanations, step-by-step examples or model examples; and
  • create assessment materials, such as practice questions and mock exams.

As part of the evaluation, led by the National Foundation for Educational Research (NFER), 58 schools will be randomly assigned to either the ChatGPT group or control group. Those assigned to the delivery group will use ChatGPT in their Key Stage 3 science lesson and resource preparation, supported by the online ChatGPT guide. The control group will not use ChatGPT or any other GenAI tool in any lesson and resource preparation.

In addition to online diary entries and surveys, all participants will also be asked to submit lesson plans to an independent panel of teachers, who will use them to compare and assess the quality of AI-generated lesson resources.

In the past year, there has been a huge increase in the demand for and use of generative AI in schools. But there is currently very little research into its impact in the classroom, and how teachers can use it to support improvements to their practice.

This will be one of the EEF’s first Teacher Choices trials, a new type of evaluation, which aim to help us learn more about the impact of non-programmatical approaches that teachers use in their classrooms.

Secondary schools can sign up to take part in this trial through the EEF website. Those that participate will receive a thank you payment for contributing to the research.

Professor Becky Francis CBE, Chief Executive of the Education Endowment Foundation (EEF), said:

James Turner, Chief Executive of the Hg Foundation, said:

A DfE spokesperson said: