If you are a teacher navigating AI in the classroom, Google wants to help.
The company said it will provide free AI literacy training and access to its Gemini tools to all six million K-12 teachers and higher education faculty across the United States. The nationwide effort, built with ISTE+ASCD, comes as schools continue to debate how to handle generative AI.
Some districts have restricted it. Others have embraced it. And many educators say they lack formal guidelines.
Google emphasized that its program is designed to give teachers practical skills and credentials so they can confidently guide more than 74 million students in an AI-driven world.
Google launches AI literacy partnership with ISTE+ASCD
Google said in its announcement that the initiative represents the largest effort of its kind to provide AI literacy training to US educators. The program will roll out in the coming months, and educators can express interest through a Google form.
Chris Phillips, vice president and general manager of Education at Google, noted in the announcement that teachers need structured and realistic support to integrate AI tools into already demanding workloads.
“AI can transform how students learn, but it can be overwhelming for educators to master this new technology on top of their already demanding workloads,” Phillips emphasized. He also highlighted that for AI to be truly impactful in schools, educators should lead the way.
According to Google, the curriculum is being developed with ISTE+ASCD and will align with the organization’s profile of an AI Ready Graduate. This framework equips students with the essential AI capabilities they need to thrive in the future while aligning with current standards for teachers and faculty.
Educators who complete a session will receive recognition through micro-credentials or digital badges that show their AI literacy with Google tools.
The effort, according to Richard Culatta, CEO of ISTE+ASCD, aims to equip teachers with the necessary skills to guide students responsibly as AI adoption accelerates.
“As AI changes how we work and how we learn, we must prioritize supporting educators to keep pace with these changes,” Culatta mentioned.
“If teachers aren’t provided the support they need, students will not have the guidance and mentorship to use AI in ways that support effective learning,” he added.
Classroom use cases and competitive stakes
Google remarked that the training will focus on practical classroom scenarios rather than theory.
Modules will show educators how to create personalized lessons using the same-day assessment data and use Gemini as an individualized study coach in large lecture settings. Educators will also learn how to adapt materials to different reading levels, languages, and learning styles.
The company also shared that teachers and faculty are already using tools like NotebookLM and Gemini’s Guided Learning to transform daily instruction. These tools help students analyze exam results independently and even build interactive trivia games without coding.
The Tech Buzz reported that the move places Google more directly in competition with Microsoft, which has pushed OpenAI-powered Copilot tools into schools as vendors compete for classroom market share.
The publication also said that the initiative could strengthen Google’s broader education ecosystem, which includes Google Classroom, Workspace for Education, and Chromebooks widely used in US K-12 schools.
Explore how Microsoft is expanding free AI tools, training, and premium software for teachers and students as schools navigate responsible AI use in the classroom.


