Student using laptop

(Photo by EZ-Stock Studio on Shutterstock)

Fears Among Parents, Teachers, And Students Run High As Artificial Intelligence More Commonplace Than Ever Before

In A Nutshell

  • Two-thirds of Americans (67%) say teachers aren’t prepared to handle AI in classrooms, and 70% of educators agree.
  • One in five students admit using AI in ways they consider outright cheating, while another 25% operate in a “gray area.”
  • Most Americans (87%) want AI literacy taught in schools, but 79% refuse to pay extra tuition for AI integration.
  • Deepfake fears run high (89%), and 95% demand schools get consent before using student data in AI tools.

TEANECK, N.J. — Nearly 9 in 10 Americans fear someone will use artificial intelligence to create fake videos of students or school staff, while 1 in 5 students admit they’ve already used AI in ways they consider outright cheating on assignments. These revelations come from a survey of 1,000 Americans that shows a nation grappling with an education revolution, one that’s happening faster than many anticipated.

According to the survey conducted by Hanwha Vision, while 87% of Americans want AI literacy taught in schools, 67% believe teachers aren’t prepared to handle the technology that’s already reshaping their classrooms. The disconnect between AI’s rapid adoption and educator readiness has created a perfect storm of opportunity and anxiety in American education.

70% of Teachers Admit They’re Not Ready for AI Integration

The survey reveals a worrisome preparedness gap in American schools. While two-thirds of Americans fear that teachers lack proper AI training, the concern runs even deeper among educators themselves. About 70% of teachers and administrators admit they don’t feel ready to use AI effectively in their classrooms.

Despite this unease, most Americans still see AI’s potential to reduce teacher workload. About 66% support using AI to draft parent communications and reports, provided teachers review the content for accuracy and tone. However, resistance remains among those who find AI communication too impersonal (20%) or believe school messages should always come from humans (13%).

When staffing shortages occur, Americans prefer hybrid solutions over pure AI replacement. Among teachers, 58% favor pairing AI with remote human instructors, while 61% of parents share this preference. Around 1 in 10 parents, teachers, and students would rather cancel or delay classes than rely solely on AI assistance.

Robot professor teaching a class
Should AI assist teachers in the classroom? (Image generated by StudyFinds on Shutterstock)

AI Cheating Detection Gains Support as 20% of Students Admit to Academic Dishonesty

Student honesty about AI use reveals concerning trends. Among students surveyed, 20% admit their AI use clearly constitutes cheating, while another 25% acknowledge operating in ethical gray areas. Only 20% report avoiding AI for schoolwork entirely.

American opinions on AI-assisted assignments remain split. About one-third (32%) consider using AI for homework outright plagiarism, while fewer than 1 in 10 see no problem with it. The majority take a nuanced view, arguing that context and transparency matter more than blanket bans.

Schools are fighting back with technology. Four in 5 Americans (78%) support using AI to detect cheating, showing broad public backing for automated academic integrity measures. Support for AI-human collaboration is strong in specific areas: 59% prefer collaboration for grading, 61% for administrative work, and 69% for detecting cheating.

However, respondents draw firm lines at more personal responsibilities: about 78% say AI should never handle disciplinary recommendations, and 71% oppose AI managing parent-teacher communication independently.

Beyond academic monitoring, Americans have experienced AI-related harm firsthand. Two-thirds report either falling victim to AI-driven scams or knowing someone who has. Students face the highest risk, with 20% having been deceived by AI-generated scams, nearly triple the rate of parents and teachers. Students also experience AI harassment, including fake images and threats, at double the adult rate.

Robot in classroom working on computer, using AI
One in five students admit their use of AI constitutes cheating. (© Yuliia – stock.adobe.com)

89% Fear Deepfakes While Demanding Privacy Protections

The threat of AI-generated fake content dominates safety concerns, with 89% of Americans worried about deepfakes targeting students or school staff. Teachers express the highest anxiety levels, with 60% reporting serious worry about this digital threat.

Privacy protection demands are nearly universal. About 95% want schools to obtain explicit consent before using student data with AI tools. Among this group, roughly two-thirds across all categories (parents, students, and teachers) insist permission should always be required regardless of the specific application. Only 5% believe consent isn’t necessary at all.

For governance, Americans favor state-level oversight, with 3 in 5 supporting state education departments setting AI policies. Students, parents, and teachers show remarkable agreement on this point, with 61% to 63% across groups supporting state leadership. While 73% express satisfaction with local school AI management, many still want additional safeguards.

AI Literacy Education Demanded by 87% Despite Cost Concerns

Despite widespread concerns, Americans recognize AI’s educational benefits. When asked about ideal AI applications, respondents prioritize explaining difficult concepts (25%), practice questions and quizzing (22%), study tips and encouragement (22%), and progress tracking (21%).

The push for AI education is nearly universal, with 87% supporting AI literacy instruction. Most want it as required curriculum (67%) rather than an elective (20%). Timing preferences reveal urgency: one-third believe instruction should begin in middle school, while 16% prefer elementary school introduction.

Financial reality tempers enthusiasm for AI adoption. Four in 5 Americans refuse to pay extra tuition for AI-integrated schools. Only 14% would pay up to $1,000 more annually, with just 7% willing to spend beyond that threshold.


Methodology: Hanwha Vision surveyed 1,000 Americans in 2025 to explore perspectives on artificial intelligence in education. The respondent breakdown included 34% students, 33% parents, and 33% educators (teachers, professors, and administrators). This balanced distribution enabled comprehensive analysis across different educational stakeholders and generational perspectives.

About StudyFinds Analysis

Called "brilliant," "fantastic," and "spot on" by scientists and researchers, our acclaimed StudyFinds Analysis articles are created using an exclusive AI-based model with complete human oversight by the StudyFinds Editorial Team. For these articles, we use an unparalleled LLM process across multiple systems to analyze entire journal papers, extract data, and create accurate, accessible content. Our writing and editing team proofreads and polishes each and every article before publishing. With recent studies showing that artificial intelligence can interpret scientific research as well as (or even better) than field experts and specialists, StudyFinds was among the earliest to adopt and test this technology before approving its widespread use on our site. We stand by our practice and continuously update our processes to ensure the very highest level of accuracy. Read our AI Policy (link below) for more information.

Our Editorial Process

StudyFinds publishes digestible, agenda-free, transparent research summaries that are intended to inform the reader as well as stir civil, educated debate. We do not agree nor disagree with any of the studies we post, rather, we encourage our readers to debate the veracity of the findings themselves. All articles published on StudyFinds are vetted by our editors prior to publication and include links back to the source or corresponding journal article, if possible.

Our Editorial Team

Steve Fink

Editor-in-Chief

John Anderer

Associate Editor

Leave a Comment