The 15-Minute AI Policy: What Good Looks Like for Independent Schools
A good AI policy isn't a 30-page document. It's a clear, defensible position that staff can follow and governors can understand.
Most schools don’t have an AI policy because writing one feels like a massive undertaking. It doesn’t have to be.
A good AI policy isn’t a 30-page document that sits in a drawer. It’s a clear, defensible position that staff can follow and governors can understand.
Here’s what it should include — and what you can skip.
What a good AI policy covers
- Scope. Who does this policy apply to? All staff? Students? Contractors? Be specific.
- Approved uses. What can staff use AI for? Lesson planning, administration, communication drafts? State it clearly.
- Prohibited uses. What’s off limits? Student data in free tools? AI-generated reports without review? Final assessments? Name them.
- Data protection. What information can never be entered into AI tools? Names, SEN data, safeguarding information, exam content. Be explicit.
- Student use. What’s your position on students using AI for homework and coursework? This needs to be clear enough to explain to parents.
- Review cycle. When will this policy be reviewed? AI is moving fast. Annual review is the minimum.
What you don’t need
You don’t need:
- A technical explanation of how AI works
- Predictions about future AI developments
- Lengthy philosophical discussions about AI in education
- A list of every possible AI tool and whether it’s approved
Keep it practical. A two-page policy that staff actually read is better than a twenty-page policy that nobody does.
The test
A good AI policy passes three tests:
- A new teacher can read it in 10 minutes and know what to do
- A governor can understand your position in one paragraph
- A parent asking “what’s your AI policy?” gets a clear answer
If your current policy — or lack of one — doesn’t pass these tests, you have a gap to close.
The Pedagogue Policy Architect generates board-ready AI policy documents in around 15 minutes, aligned to current DfE guidance. See how it works.