Artificial intelligence is becoming part of everyday school life. Teachers are using AI to help with lesson planning, feedback, assessment preparation and administrative tasks. Yet many receive little guidance on how to use these tools effectively.
The quality of an AI response depends largely on the quality of the prompt. Good AI use starts with good prompt design.
A well-designed prompt helps educators save time, improve consistency and generate more useful outputs. A vague prompt often produces generic responses that require significant editing before they can be used.
This practical guide explores the principles of effective prompt design and shows how AI for teachers can support common classroom and leadership tasks.
When using AI in teaching, four principles can dramatically improve results.
AI performs best when it understands the situation. Instead of writing a broad request, include details that shape the response. For example, specify the age of learners, subject area, lesson length, learning objectives and the type of activities you need. The more relevant context you provide, the more useful the output will be.
Asking AI to take on a specific role can also improve the quality of the response. A prompt that positions AI as a subject specialist, curriculum planner or assessment expert can help guide the style and level of detail.
Examples show AI exactly what you want. Rather than requesting a student report, provide a sample paragraph and ask AI to follow the same format and tone. This reduces ambiguity and creates more consistent results.
Many educators make the mistake of asking AI to complete a large, complex task in a single prompt. Instead, break the process into stages.
For example:
This approach usually produces better results and gives you more control over the final output.
Educators should also use AI responsibly.
Avoid entering:
Human judgement remains essential. AI can support decision-making, but teachers should always review and adapt outputs before using them with learners.
For a broader discussion of opportunities and risks, our article on navigating AI opportunities and challenges explores some of the key considerations for schools.
The following examples show how prompt design can be refined to produce more useful results.
A common use of AI in teaching is creating lesson plans.
‘Create a lesson about renewable energy.’
The response will likely be broad and generic.
‘Act as an experienced science teacher. Create a 60-minute Year 9 lesson on renewable energy. Include learning objectives, a warm-up, teacher explanations, collaborative learning tasks and consolidation activities. Differentiate activities for learners who need additional support and those who require extra challenge.’
This refined prompt provides context, role, structure and learner information, creating a far more useful AI lesson plan.
Schools interested in wider applications may also find our discussion on AI and technology in learning useful.
AI can help draft comments for reports while maintaining consistency.
‘Write a report for a student.’
This gives little guidance.
‘Write a professional end-of-term report for a Year 7 student who participates enthusiastically in class discussions, completes homework consistently and has improved their analytical writing skills. Keep the tone positive, constructive and approximately 100 words long.’
This result is likely to be much closer to what the teacher needs.
AI can help create revision resources and practice questions.
‘Create exam questions on photosynthesis.’
‘Act as an examination specialist. Create ten GCSE-style biology questions on photosynthesis. Include a mixture of multiple-choice, short-answer and extended-response questions. Provide a mark scheme and model answers.’
If needed, you can refine further:
‘Increase the difficulty level and include more application-based questions.’
Providing personalised feedback can be time-consuming. AI can help generate draft feedback that teachers can adapt.
‘Give feedback on this essay.’
‘Act as a Year 10 English teacher. Review this essay using the following assessment criteria: identify three strengths, two areas for improvement and one practical next step. Use encouraging language suitable for a 15-year-old learner.’
This structure produces clearer and more actionable feedback.
If you’re looking for additional classroom AI uses, explore our guide to using AI tools in your classroom.
Project-based learning often requires significant preparation.
‘Create a sustainability project.’
‘Act as a project-based learning specialist. Design a four-week sustainability project for Year 8 students. Include learning objectives, weekly milestones, collaborative activities, assessment opportunities and a final presentation task. Ensure activities develop research, communication and critical thinking skills.’
Further refinement could include:
‘Adapt the project for learners whose first language is not English.’
As schools become more confident using AI, it makes sense to move beyond individual experimentation.
One effective approach is creating a shared prompt library. This allows staff to store successful prompts, refine them over time and develop consistent approaches across departments.
A prompt library can:
Schools can organise prompts by category, such as lesson planning, assessment, reporting, administration and communication.
Over time, these collections become valuable professional resources that support both new and experienced staff.
AI is not a shortcut for professional expertise. The most effective use of AI still depends on the knowledge, judgement and experience of educators.
However, strong prompt design can help teachers work more efficiently and focus their time where it matters most.
By providing context, assigning roles, using examples and breaking complex tasks into manageable steps, educators can generate more useful outputs and avoid many of the frustrations associated with AI tools.
As AI continues to develop, prompt design will become an increasingly important professional skill. Schools that invest time in building prompt literacy and sharing effective prompts across teams will be better placed to use AI safely, consistently and effectively. You can refer to our AI guidelines for teachers for further insight on prompt design and responsible use of AI.