The email appeared in inboxes on a Tuesday, as is the case with most policy changes these days. It featured a friendly product video and mild language. Google, the company that surreptitiously infiltrated almost every American classroom between the 2020 pandemic scramble and the Chromebook rollouts, announced a comprehensive update to how its educational tools will function. Before the first bell rang, teachers, half of whom were still sipping lukewarm coffee in shared staff rooms, found themselves attempting to understand what it truly meant.
Despite the announcement’s seeming modesty, the change is significant. Google is reorganizing how Workspace for Education handles student data, how AI features interact with Classroom, and how teachers are involved. The company places a lot of emphasis on “personalized learning paths,” which may seem comforting, but keep in mind that in the tech industry, personalization typically means more data, not less. It’s another matter entirely whether districts actually have the bandwidth to keep up.

It’s difficult to ignore the timing. One of the six recommendations made by the Center for American Progress to change K–12 education in the US is to guarantee “equitable, accessible, and ethical use of AI and education technologies.”” Although it’s not exactly the response policy experts had in mind, Google’s update reads almost like a response. During a livestream, a product manager awkwardly referred to the company’s increased reliance on AI-driven lesson generation, automated feedback, and “co-teaching with the model.” Over the past few weeks, teachers I’ve spoken to have expressed a mixture of fascination and discomfort.
A twenty-three-year veteran teacher in suburban Ohio told me she used to grade essays while reheating dinner on her kitchen table. She now chooses which of the AI-generated feedback drafts to retain by scrolling through them. She enjoys how much time it saves. According to her, she dislikes “feeling like the second reader in my own classroom.” What Google’s policy change may actually mean is rooted in this tension between relief and quiet displacement.
Of course, there is still a problem with teacher compensation. The national average teacher salary for 2022–2023 was approximately $69,544. This may seem reasonable, but when inflation is taken into account, teachers are actually making about 5% less than they were ten years ago. Last year, hiring difficulties were reported by 86% of public schools. Google is adding more potent tools, more integrated features, and a policy framework that presumes teachers have the time to learn everything by September to this overburdened, underfunded system. Most of them don’t.
A few of the modifications are actually helpful. Since the early days of Chromebooks, schools have been quietly requesting improvements such as improved translation, streamlined accessibility features, and more transparent data-handling procedures. Some of the new safeguards feel like long-overdue concessions, but skeptics point out that concessions wrapped in product launches tend to favor the company writing the policy. Privacy advocates have been fighting Google’s data practices for years. Whether districts will carefully read the fine print or just click “accept” is still unknown.
As I watch this develop, the thing that worries me the most is the gradual normalization of a corporate entity dictating public education without fully acknowledging it. A school board is not what Google is. A state legislature is not what it is. Technically speaking, it isn’t even an education company in the conventional sense. Nevertheless, millions of students are using a system whose guidelines were created in Mountain View. Instructors will adjust. They do it every time. However, in the rush of the upcoming school year, adaptation is not the same as agreement, and that distinction merits more consideration than it currently receives.
