Blog

Leading with Confidence: What MATs Need to Know About GenAI in Education

Leading with Confidence What MATs Need to Know About GenAI in Education Cover

6 min read

2025/04/10

A closer look at the online briefing ‘Effective GenAI for UK Schools, Academies and MATs’ and how UK MATs are strategically implementing AI to empower teachers, streamline operations and uphold ethical standards.

Leading with Confidence: What MATs Need to Know About GenAI in Education

London, April 10, 2025 – The online briefing ‘Effective GenAI for UK Schools, Academies and MATs’ offered MAT leaders a clear, practical overview of how artificial intelligence is beginning to shift the education landscape, not just in theory, but in day-to-day classroom realities.

Get a glance of the insightful discussion by watching the recording of the webinar.

The event was moderated by Giada Brisotto, Marketing Project Manager at Avallain. The panel featured: 

  • Shareen Wilkinson, Executive Director of Education at LEO Academy Trust
  • Carles Vidal, Business Director at Avallain Lab 
  • Reza Mosavian, Senior Partnership Development Manager at TeacherMatic.

Anchored in the findings of ‘Teaching with GenAI’, an independent report produced by Oriel Square and commissioned by the Avallain Group, the message throughout the session was clear: GenAI can help MATs reduce pressure on staff, drive efficiency and maintain strategic oversight, provided implementation is ethical, measured and pedagogically sound.

From Policy to Practice: What MATs Are Actually Doing

Shareen Wilkinson, Executive Director of Education at LEO Academy Trust, outlined their structured approach to GenAI adoption, designed specifically for multi-academy environments. The trust has implemented a tiered strategy that recognises the distinct needs and responsibilities of different stakeholder groups:

  • Leadership and management use GenAI to enhance operational efficiency, improve decision-making through data insights and streamline trust-wide documentation.
  • Teachers are supported in reducing planning time, customising resources and improving assessment strategies with AI-assisted tools.
  • Pupils are beginning to explore safe and age-appropriate uses of GenAI, supported by clear guidance and staff oversight to ensure digital literacy and ethical use.

“We started with low-risk areas,” Wilkinson explained, “to see where time could be saved without compromising learning or safety.” The results have been encouraging. Teachers report gaining back several hours a week, while resource quality and adaptability have improved across subjects and key stages.

Key lesson for MATs: A phased, role-specific approach allows for safe experimentation, measurable impact and trust-wide consistency, without a one-size-fits-all rollout.

Empowering Teachers, Not Replacing Them

A strong theme throughout was the role of GenAI as a support mechanism to empower teachers, not replace them or create more challenges for them. “It’s not about teachers working harder,” said Wilkinson. “It’s about teachers working smarter, and having the time to focus on what really matters: the learners.”

The conversation echoed findings from the ‘Teaching with GenAI’ report, which shows that the majority of teachers believe GenAI has real potential to reduce workload. When MATs implement these tools with a clear framework, the benefits can be scaled across schools without losing autonomy or creativity at the local level.

As Carles Vidal from Avallain Lab explained, “AI should never replace educators. It should reduce workload, improve access and protect the human relationships at the heart of learning.”

Key insight: Retention improves when teachers feel supported, not sidelined. AI can ease burnout when it enhances, not replaces, teacher agency.

Ensuring Safety, Alignment and Strategic Fit

Reza Mosavian of TeacherMatic reminded leaders that GenAI implementation is not just about tools but about trust. “Ask the right questions: Who built this? Is it safe? Does it protect our staff and pupils’ data? Does it align with your values as a MAT?”

This aligns closely with Avallain Intelligence, the group’s strategy for ethical AI development in education. With this approach, the MATs sector can effectively but also safely implement Avallain’s AI solutions such as TeacherMatic, our AI toolkit for teachers, that truly enhance teaching and learning, without compromising the integrity of the classroom.

For MAT leaders, the message is to focus on safeguarding, GDPR compliance, and curriculum alignment, not on novelty or speed of rollout.

Evaluation First, Adoption Second

The speakers stressed the importance of structured evaluation before adoption. MATs should treat GenAI procurement like any strategic initiative, with clear success criteria.

Reza offered a simple rubric:

  • Does it save staff time?
  • Does it meet the needs of all learners?
  • Is it safe and trustworthy?
  • Can it scale within your trust structure?

To support this process, many MATs are finding success with a digital champion model. As highlighted in the ‘Teaching with GenAI’ report and discussed by both Reza and Shareen during the session, appointing digital champions allows schools to trial tools in context, evaluate their effectiveness and build internal confidence through peer-led engagement.

Reza noted that the most effective champions are teachers still in the classroom, or those with a strong teaching and learning background. “They’re grounded in the day-to-day pressures and can assess AI through a real pedagogical lens,” he said. A peer-led structure not only builds trust, but also ensures feedback is relevant and grounded in actual practice.

He shared the example of a school that piloted GenAI specifically for lesson planning. Teachers trialled tools within a controlled group, giving iterative feedback to refine their use. One major takeaway was the clear time-saving benefit, but equally important was the ability to assess how AI could complement, rather than replace, teachers’ existing methods.

Pilot programmes, staff feedback loops and structured trial periods emerged as crucial components of sustainable GenAI implementation. Most importantly, this collaborative and contextual approach helps to win “hearts and minds” within the organisation, laying the groundwork for long-term success.

Final Thought: Collaboration Is Our Strongest Tool

The briefing concluded with a call to leadership. MATs have a unique opportunity to shape AI’s role in UK education. By collaborating, sharing knowledge and placing ethics at the forefront, trusts can lead this change rather than react to it.

The Avallain Group remains committed to supporting MATs through research, safe tools and professional dialogue, ensuring that GenAI is a partner in progress, not a point of risk.

Explore the Full Report: Teaching with GenAI

Click here to gain deeper insights and access practical recommendations for successful GenAI implementation in the full report.

About Avallain

At Avallain, we are on a mission to reshape the future of education through technology. We create customisable digital education solutions that empower educators and engage learners around the world. With a focus on accessibility and user-centred design, powered by AI and cutting-edge technology, we strive to make education engaging, effective and inclusive.

Find out more at avallain.com

About TeacherMatic

TeacherMatic, a part of the Avallain Group since 2024, is a ready-to-go AI toolkit for teachers that saves hours of lesson preparation by using scores of AI generators to create flexible lesson plans, worksheets, quizzes and more.
Find out more at teachermatic.com


Share this article

Related Articles

Effective GenAI in Language Education A Reflection on Key Insights Cover Image copy

Artificial Intelligence

In our recent insight briefing, we explored key findings from ‘Teaching with GenAI,’ an independent report commissioned by Avallain and...

February 27, 2025

-

5 min read

Avallain Reinforces its Commitment to Research Driven Solutions with a Newly Commissioned GenAI Report copy

Artificial Intelligence

How is GenAI being integrated into schools to enhance teaching and learning? ‘Teaching with GenAI: Insights on Productivity, Creativity, Quality...

January 29, 2025

-

5 min read

Shri Footring, Governor at Writtle College, ARU and Prof. John Traxler, UNESCO Chair, Commonwealth of Learning Chair and Academic Director of the Avallain Lab, next to a picture of a HE teacher discussing AI with colleagues.

Artificial Intelligence

Shri Footring and Prof. John Traxler share insights from a series of informal conversations with university professionals, leading and supporting...

March 28, 2025

-

8 min read