GUEST PODCAST: EdTechnical Series 5 Episode 2
Libby is on maternity leave, so Hermione Thompson steps in to guest co-host this episode of EdTechnical alongside Owen. Hermione is AI and EdTech lead at Purposeful Ventures and previously advised on education policy inside the UK Prime Minister’s Office at 10 Downing Street.
Owen and Hermione sit down with Minister Olivia Bailey, the UK Department for Education minister responsible for AI in schools, for a conversation on where AI in education is headed. Bailey believes government should actively shape this space rather than sit back. Through the government’s AI Tutoring Tools Pioneer Programme, up to eight companies will be selected to co-design curriculum-aligned AI tutoring tools directly with schools. Trials start this summer, and a national rollout is targeted for 2027, potentially reaching 450,000 disadvantaged pupils a year.
Bailey says these coming tools are fundamentally different from a generic chatbot that gives children the answers without engagement or challenge. She explains how they are thinking about the tension between personalized AI and managing a classroom of 30 kids who need to study the same topic. The government’s approach is to test and learn different approaches to see how children get the learning benefits normally associated with a real-life personal tutor.
“We want to make sure that what we’re developing really works, and we’ll be doing everything we can to demonstrate that and to test that.”
Olivia Bailey
Olivia Bailey’s bio
Olivia Bailey is a junior minister at the UK Department for Education, responsible for early years, school food, and digital/AI policy. Before Parliament, she worked in public policy for the Labour Party, advised Keir Starmer as Leader of the Opposition, and worked across think tanks and public opinion research. She now leads the department’s AI Tutoring Tools Pioneer Programme and its AI safety standards for schools.
Links
DfE announcement: Edtech and AI companies invited to help build safe AI tutoring tools
Programme detail
Schools Week coverage: DfE invites bids from AI tutoring pilot partners