The question is no longer whether artificial intelligence belongs in South African classrooms. It is already there, formally through approved school platforms, and informally through learner usage and teacher experimentation.
The real challenge is moving beyond the hype to provide schools with practical clarity, consistency, and implementation frameworks that let them use these technologies effectively and responsibly. As Riaan van der Bergh, Deputy CEO of the Federation of Governing Bodies of South African Schools (FEDSAS), recently observed, the priority is giving teachers and learners the exact frameworks they need to navigate these tools safely. That is not a technological hurdle alone. It is fundamentally a challenge of governance, operational readiness, and system design.
Schools are among the most complex institutions in society. They simultaneously juggle teaching, communication, administration, finance, legal compliance, and pastoral care. In that high-pressure environment, any new technology must reduce complexity, or it risks compounding it.
Two decades of working with schools have taught us one simple truth: efficiently run schools are often the best-performing ones. When communication flows smoothly and administrative burdens lift, educators can do what they are there to do: teach. That lesson is critical as AI enters the fold.
While public conversation fixates on AI’s capabilities, the more important question is integration. AI can support personalised learning, streamline administration, and free educators from routine tasks. But without strict oversight, it introduces serious risks: misinformation, fragmented systems, and data privacy breaches.
The policy gap in our schools is widening. Well-intentioned teachers are uploading learner work, report data, and behavioural notes into public generative AI platforms to save time, inadvertently exposing personally identifiable information to public algorithms and raising immediate flags under the Protection of Personal Information Act (POPIA). The answer is not to ban innovation. It is to govern it.
Schools need clear guidance on what data can and cannot be shared with AI systems. Governing bodies need policies that remove legal uncertainty. And schools need technology partners who understand the unique legal responsibilities that come with managing learner information.
The most promising applications of AI in education are not necessarily the most visible. They are the ones embedded within trusted systems and governed environments, where schools retain oversight of information, access and accountability.
As schools adopt AI, the focus should not be on introducing more tools, but on ensuring that these technologies are integrated into existing institutional frameworks. AI is most effective when it helps simplify complexity, improve access to information and reduce administrative burdens without compromising privacy, governance or professional judgement.
This is particularly important in an educational context, where schools are custodians of sensitive learner, staff and family information. The conversation around AI cannot be separated from the conversation around data governance, security and compliance. Educators need clear guidelines on how AI can be used responsibly, and schools need systems that support innovation without creating additional risk.
The next phase of AI in education is likely to move beyond simply providing answers. Increasingly, AI will assist with routine administrative processes, help staff navigate information more efficiently and support decision-making through timely insights. Used responsibly, this has the potential to free educators and school leaders from repetitive tasks, allowing them to spend more time on the human aspects of education that technology cannot replace.
The goal should never be to automate education itself. It should be to create more time, capacity and focus for the people at the heart of it.
There is also a significant equity risk at play. Well-resourced schools can afford to develop independent AI policies and train staff. Millions of learners in under-resourced schools cannot. Without a coordinated national approach, AI adoption will widen the digital divide rather than close it.
South Africa faces a clear choice: let AI adoption happen ad hoc, driven by fragmented experimentation, or build the governance frameworks, training programmes, and trusted systems required to elevate the entire sector. The latter demands urgent collaboration between government, governing bodies, educators, and technology providers.
Technology alone does not improve education. Effective, safe implementation does.
We do not need more debate about whether AI belongs in education. Reality has answered that. What we need now is the structural discipline to ensure it strengthens our schools rather than complicates them. The challenge is no longer one of possibility. It is one of readiness.
- Willem Kitshoff is the Chief Executive Officer of d6, a leading South African school management and communication technology provider.

