It started with a small moment at home.
A parent noticed something unusual about their son’s homework. The book report he handed in was polished,perhaps a little too polished.
When they asked him about it, he didn’t deny anything.
“Honestly, I was pretty alarmed at how nonchalant he was about the whole thing,” the parent wrote in an online forum.
The child had read the book, and he could talk about it in detail. In his mind, he had simply used ChatGPT to organise thoughts he already had.
For his parent, it felt different.
“At the end of the day, plagiarism is plagiarism… it’s not his original work, and it’s unethical, plain and simple.”
That conversation is now happening in homes around the world.
Since AI tools like ChatGPT emerged in 2022, they have rapidly become part of how students learn.
They can write essays, explain complex ideas, and structure arguments in seconds.
Schools have responded in different ways. Some have tried to block AI, others have introduced detection tools, and many are still deciding what appropriate use looks like.
Nord Anglia Education is taking a different approach.
Rather than trying to stop AI, Nord Anglia schools are actively teaching students how to use it well – and wisely – and tothink beyond it.
Because the question for parents is no longer whether children will use AI, it’s whether they’ll learn to think alongside it.
For educators, the focus goes far beyond the final piece of work.
Dr Bruce Geddes, Deputy Head of Secondary at The British International School in Kuala Lumpur, believes AI presents a transformative moment for education:“The biggest opportunity we've had in our lifetimes, for many, many spheres, but particularly in education.”
But with that opportunity comes a shift in how learning is understood.
“Teachers rightly look at it as risky because we get kids to produce stuff all the time,” he says. “But we don't really care about what they produce. What we care about is them doing the thinking activity they're supposed to be going through when they produce the stuff. It is only the thinking that leads to learning.”
A book report is not just about retelling a story. It helps a child form opinions, connect ideas, and express themselves clearly.
If that thinking is removed, something important is lost.
Across Nord Anglia schools, learning is being redefined for an AI-driven world.
Through a two-year global research collaboration with Boston College, involving thousands of students and teachers, Nord Anglia explored how to help childrendevelop the skills that matter most when technology can generate answers instantly.
The research focused on:
Understanding how students learn
Building independence and ownership
Developing future skillslike critical thinking and creativity
Strengthening collaboration and problem-solving
The way Nord Angliastudents were taught resulted in:
21% improvement in critical thinking
20% improvement in curiosity
15% boost in compassion, collaboration, and commitment
As AI becomes more capable, one thing is becoming clear.
The advantage will not come from what students can produce,butit will come from what they can question, challenge, and create.
In a world where answers are instant, value shifts to:
Thinking critically
Judging what is right
Connecting ideas in new ways
Using technology with intention, not dependence
This is why Nord Anglia Education is focused on teaching students how to think in a world where AI exists.
That means helping every child to:
Understand how they learn
Develop independence and judgement
Master using AI as a tool, without losing their own voice
Because the leaders of tomorrow will notbe those who rely on technology, but by those who know when to question it, and when to go beyond it.
Find the right Nord Anglia school for your child here.
Must-read recommendations:
Stay up to date on future articles by joining our mailing list
Please enter a real email address
We use cookies to improve your online experiences. To learn more and choose your cookies options, please refer to our cookie policy.