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    Guide · UK teachers

    AI for lesson planning: a pedagogy-first guide for UK teachers

    How — and whether — to use AI when planning lessons in UK schools. Curriculum-aligned, evidence-informed, and rooted in Oxford doctoral research into what actually works.

    Start with the pedagogy, not the prompt

    Most AI lesson planning advice starts with a clever prompt. We think that is the wrong place to start. A lesson is a sequence of decisions about prior knowledge, cognitive load, modelling, practice and assessment. AI can accelerate the work around those decisions — it cannot make them for you.

    Where AI genuinely helps UK teachers

    • Drafting learning objectives aligned to the National Curriculum or exam spec
    • Generating retrieval practice questions tied to prior units
    • Producing worked examples and non-examples for modelling
    • Differentiating tasks for SEND pupils using anonymised profiles
    • Writing knowledge organisers and revision summaries

    Where teachers should keep AI out of the loop

    • Sequencing a curriculum — this is a professional judgement, not a generation task
    • Anything involving named pupils, SEND data or safeguarding information
    • Final marking and feedback that affects pupil progress decisions

    A UK-specific checklist before you use any AI lesson planner

    1. Does it use UK terminology (Year Group, not Grade)?
    2. Does it map to the National Curriculum, GCSE or A-Level spec?
    3. Is there a clear data retention policy for pupil-free prompts?
    4. Does it surface its reasoning so you can challenge it?
    5. Is the output something an Ofsted inspector would recognise as good practice?

    Oxford-rooted

    Built on doctoral research into how UK teachers reason about planning.

    Curriculum-aligned

    UK National Curriculum, GCSE and A-Level. No US terminology.

    Safeguarding-aware

    No pupil PII. Anonymised identifiers by design.

    Try the Lesson Planning module

    A pedagogy-first lesson planner that asks the right questions before it writes anything.

    Frequently asked questions

    Should UK teachers use AI for lesson planning?

    Yes — as a thinking partner, not a replacement. The pedagogical judgement stays with the teacher.

    Is AI lesson planning aligned with the UK curriculum?

    Only if the tool is. Generic AI defaults to US terminology — choose UK-specific tools that reference Year Groups and the National Curriculum.

    How do schools stay GDPR-safe?

    Never enter pupil names or SEND details. Use anonymised identifiers and choose providers with a clear UK data position.

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