logo
EXPLAINED: How German schools are including more and more AI

EXPLAINED: How German schools are including more and more AI

Local Germany08-07-2025
AI products have been disrupting classrooms since they became publicly available.
Since the release of ChatGPT – a chatbot that can write essays on command in German or English and many other languages in a matter of seconds – teachers have warned the tools are being abused by students.
AI use among students is not only about 'cheating'. Experts have voiced concern that AI dependence is robbing young people of the chance to develop crucial skills for themselves.
On the other hand, there are educators who insist that AI has a place in the classroom, and who argue that trying to ban or ignore the technology would be to fail to train students for the world in which we live.
Here's a look at why some German schools are already bringing AI-powered tools into the classroom, and what it suggests about the future role of AI in education.
'A new era'
A
report
in
Tagesschau
about a high school (
Gymnasium
) in Cologne which has embraced an in-class AI tool begins with the words: 'A new era has begun at Thusneldastraße…'
The high school uses an AI program called 'Study Buddy', which is based on ChatGPT and designed to support students in the classroom.
Students quoted in the report suggest that the tool is helpful: one notes that AI has endless patience for answering the same question in different ways to help them understand, another suggests they feel more engaged while interacting with the chatbot.
But of course the tool still needs a fair amount of fine tuning. A mathematics teacher who uses the tool in her classroom noted that not all of the chatbot's answers are suitable for her students' level of understanding.
Chatbots are also notorious for spitting out false answers.
READ ALSO:
What is Germany's digital pact for schools and how does it affect pupils?
The Cologne high school says its staff assess and discuss where and when AI use makes sense in the classroom and where it would be counter productive.
But the headmaster suggests that keeping up with the times is important: "Students use AI anyway…it's important to us they do it reflectively…in a way that promotes learning."
Advertisement
'Telli'
Meanwhile, the city-state of Bremen has announced plans to adopt the use of a particular AI tool in its schools state-wide.
German tech news outlet
Heise
recently
reported
that schools in Bremen will make use of a specially designed chatbot called 'Telli', and that the tool will later be used in schools across the country.
Telli is a large language model (LLM) similar to ChatGPT and other mainstream chatbots, but it differs from commercial AI products in its approach to data protection.
Because Telli is hosted entirely in the European Union, it's possible to prevent personal data about its users from being transferred to other AI companies.
Advertisement
The system is also designed not to collect user data to train underlying models, and it allows
teachers to upload documents so that students can get context-specific answers.
Sascha Aulepp, Bremen's Senator for Children and Education told
Heise
, 'We want to prepare pupils for a future in which dealing with artificial intelligence will be a matter of course.'
OPINION:
German school grading is unfair on foreign students and it's maddening
Not well regulated or understood
While some schools strive to integrate AI in the classroom with care, the us of AI by students in Germany is not generally well monitored.
A recent survey by Germany's digital association (Bitkom) found that less than a quarter of German schools have school-wide rules for the use of AI in lessons.
The survey, which polled about 500 German students between the ages of 14 and 19, also found that nearly half of students said their teacher wouldn't notice if they used AI without permission for class assignments and that 29 percent assume they are better at using AI than their teachers.
Advertisement
That last finding appears to be backed up by
research
from the Robert Bosch Stiftung, which found that nearly two-thirds of teachers (62 percent) feel insecure in using AI tools like ChatGPT.
READ ALSO:
How to find mental health resources in Germany for children
Advocating for more programs such as those being introduced in Bremen or at the Thusneldastraße high school in Cologne, researchers maintain that the use of AI can't effectively be banished – instead educators and students alike need training, they say.
'ChatGPT and similar applications have long been part of young people's lives,' Dagmar Wolf of the Robert Bosch Stiftung said in a press release, adding that 'systematic training…is the only way to enable pupils to deal with each other in a reflective and responsible manner.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

OpenAI Releases Free, Downloadable Models In Competition Catch-up
OpenAI Releases Free, Downloadable Models In Competition Catch-up

Int'l Business Times

time2 days ago

  • Int'l Business Times

OpenAI Releases Free, Downloadable Models In Competition Catch-up

OpenAI on Tuesday released two new artificial intelligence (AI) models that can be downloaded for free and altered by users, to challenge similar offerings by US and Chinese competition. The release of gpt-oss-120b and gpt-oss-20b "open-weight language models" comes as the ChatGPT-maker is under pressure to share inner workings of its software in the spirit of its origin as a nonprofit. "Going back to when we started in 2015, OpenAI's mission is to ensure AGI (Artificial General Intelligence) that benefits all of humanity," said OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman. An open-weight model, in the context of generative AI, is one in which the trained parameters are made public, enabling users to fine-tune it. Meta touts its open-source approach to AI, and Chinese AI startup DeepSeek rattled the industry with its low-cost, high-performance model boasting an open weight approach that allows users to customize the technology. "This is the first time that we're releasing an open-weight model in language in a long time, and it's really incredible," OpenAI co-founder and president Greg Brockman said during a briefing with journalists. The new, text-only models deliver strong performance at low cost, according to OpenAI, which said they are suited for AI jobs like searching the internet or executing computer code, and are designed to be easy to run on local computer systems. "We are quite hopeful that this release will enable new kinds of research and the creation of new kinds of products," Altman said. OpenAI said it is working with partners including French telecommunications giant Orange and cloud-based data platform Snowflake on real-world uses of the models. The open-weight models have been tuned to thwart being used for malicious purposes, according to OpenAI. Altman early this year said his company had been "on the wrong side of history" when it came to being open about how its technology works. He later announced that OpenAI will continue to be run as a nonprofit, abandoning a contested plan to convert into a for-profit organization. The structural issue had become a point of contention, with major investors pushing for better returns. That plan faced strong criticism from AI safety activists and co-founder Elon Musk, who sued the company he left in 2018, claiming the proposal violated its founding philosophy. In the revised plan, OpenAI's money-making arm will be open to generate profits but will remain under the nonprofit board's supervision.

Ben Cornelius: Scaling Globally Isn't a Marketing Problem. It's a Systems Problem.
Ben Cornelius: Scaling Globally Isn't a Marketing Problem. It's a Systems Problem.

Int'l Business Times

time2 days ago

  • Int'l Business Times

Ben Cornelius: Scaling Globally Isn't a Marketing Problem. It's a Systems Problem.

In today's hyperconnected economy, digital companies can launch anywhere. But scaling successfully into global markets requires far more than translation and a marketing push. For software-as-a-service (SaaS) providers and mid-market firms, global business expansion hinges on the infrastructure behind language, culture, and operations. "Everyone wants more customers, more revenue, more reach," says Ben Cornelius, a global business strategist and CEO of Cornelius Communications . "But very few understand the work it takes behind the scenes to actually get there." With over 30 years of experience leading international operations and localization strategy at firms like PayPal, Adobe, and VMware, Cornelius now advises businesses on how to implement scalable globalization models and multilingual content systems that support real growth across borders. The global SaaS market is projected to exceed $1 trillion by 2030, with a significant portion coming from emerging markets and cross-border growth. Yet many companies still treat localization as an afterthought. According to CSA Research, 76 percent of online consumers prefer to buy in their native language. Despite this, only a fraction of digital platforms fully localize their product experience, creating friction that undermines customer acquisition and retention. "Most of the time, companies approach international expansion as a marketing challenge," says Cornelius. "But it's not. It's a systems challenge. It's an infrastructure challenge." This is particularly true for high-growth SaaS companies. Lacking dedicated localization teams or international go-to-market frameworks, they often rely on auto-translation or siloed efforts that miss critical legal, cultural, or UX details. Cornelius helps companies build what he calls invisible infrastructure. This is the operational backbone that enables consistent user experiences across multiple languages and geographies. It includes scalable localization workflows, multilingual content delivery pipelines, and process alignment across global teams. While serving as Director of Operations and Chief of Staff at PayPal, Cornelius oversaw localization and international product quality in over 300 markets. "We had to make sure every payment interaction, every support message, every interface element worked in context," he says. "That's not just copywriting. That's architecture." His firm, Cornelius Communications, now works with clients across North America, Europe, and Asia. Despite having no dedicated sales or marketing department, the consultancy thrives through referrals, thought leadership, and conference keynotes. "We don't do a lot of outbound," he says. "Most of our clients come through speaking engagements or reputation. That tells you how deep the need is. Companies are actively looking for someone who can build this foundation." The rise of generative AI has transformed many business functions, and localization is no exception. LLM's like ChatGPT make it easier to generate multilingual content at scale. But Cornelius warns that quality, cultural fluency, and compliance still require human insight. "There's this assumption that AI can solve localization," he says. "But AI doesn't know your buyer. It doesn't know your regulatory environment. It doesn't understand the nuance in tone between Japan and Brazil." To bridge this gap, Cornelius is developing multilingual communication agents that combine AI, machine learning, and process automation. These tools are designed to support global content transformation, including use in AR and VR environments, while maintaining accuracy and context. Modern buyers, especially in international markets, increasingly expect vendors to demonstrate sustainability, ethical sourcing, and community impact. For Cornelius, these are not just values. They are strategic levers. In addition to consulting, his firm produces autonomous hydroponic growing tables. It is an unusual but purpose-driven product line that reinforces a commitment to sustainability. "It started as a marketing project and turned into a product line," he says. "It also helps tell a credibility story that aligns with ESG priorities." These efforts have given his business a differentiated edge. Clients benefit from expert globalization support while partnering with a firm that models long-term value and operational transparency. As digital transformation accelerates and AI reshapes industries, the companies that win globally will not be the loudest. They will be the most prepared. "International success isn't flashy," says Cornelius. "It's deliberate. It's operational. It's about doing the unglamorous work behind the scenes to make your product actually work for the people you're trying to reach." For SaaS leaders, startup founders, and mid-market CEOs, the message is clear. If you want to grow globally, you need more than translation. You need a strategy built for localization, scale, and long-term success. To explore how "invisible infrastructure" can transform your global expansion efforts, connect with Ben Cornelius and his team for expert insights and strategic guidance.

What is Palantir's Gotham software and why do German police want it?
What is Palantir's Gotham software and why do German police want it?

Local Germany

time2 days ago

  • Local Germany

What is Palantir's Gotham software and why do German police want it?

The German government and police forces see Palantir's Gotham software as a powerful tool to combat serious crime and terrorism more effectively. Palantir is a data analytics and software company which develops platforms for analyzing large datasets for governments, intelligence agencies, the military, and commercial companies. Officials from Germany's interior ministry argue that Gotham can play a crucial role in modernizing and achieving technological autonomy for German police forces, allowing officers to concentrate on their primary responsibilities by minimizing the time spent cross-referencing disconnected databases At the same time, civil rights groups like the Society for Civil Liberties (GFF) and the Chaos Computer Club (CCC) have warned that adoption of the software could lead to 'dragnet surveillance', a loss of transparency, and police dependence on a foreign company. What does Gotham actually do? Gotham is a large data analytics platform which integrates previously disparate police databases. In other words, it gives police or security authorities access to a vast amount of data. Within seconds, it enables officers to find extensive information about individuals – not just names, address, and criminal records, but also social media content or mobile device data. In theory, these comprehensive profiles can reveal hidden connections between suspects and incidents, aiding in the prevention and investigation of crimes. Why is everyone talking about it now? The recent flurry of headlines in the German press were partly sparked when Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt, of the conservative CDU, suggested that he was open to expanding Palantir's use by federal police and criminal investigation agencies (in a notable shift from his predecessor's position). READ ALSO: What to know about talking to the police in Germany But much of the global attention is a result of the company's record-breaking Q2 2025 revenue announcement. Driven by soaring demand for AI technologies globally, the company posted revenues of more than a billion dollars in just three months. Which police forces in Germany already use Gotham? Three German federal states actively use Gotham: Bavaria (since 2024), Hesse (since 2017), and North Rhine-Westphalia (2019/20). After lengthy political disputes , Baden-Württemberg plans to adopt the software soon, pending amendments to the Police Act and with parliamentary oversight. Their contract is reported to be around €25 million for five years. Is the investment justified? Twenty-five million euros is a lot of money for just one state's police budget. While detailed financial information from other states remains confidential, licensing fees and ongoing maintenance suggest substantial expenses. Though comprehensive performance data is scarce due to privacy concerns, Gotham reportedly played a key role in swiftly resolving a 2024 attack in Munich by effectively mapping suspects' movements. Advertisement What other concerns exist about the software? Civil rights groups, notably the Chaos Computer Club (CCC), raise serious concerns regarding privacy and constitutional rights. Spokesperson Constanze Kurz has called Gotham a form of "dragnet investigation" which risks sweeping in vast numbers of innocent people alongside suspects, violating the German legal principle of data processing for specific purposes ( Zweckbindung ). Kurz and legal organizations like the Society for Civil Liberties (GFF) also criticise Palantir's proprietary software for its lack of transparency and the potential for misuse or the expansion of surveillance beyond legal norms. According to current law, police in Bavaria can employ Gotham without any suspicion of wrongdoing, meaning that anyone filing a complaint or merely present at the scene of a crime can become subject to data scrutiny. READ ALSO: German federal police to be equipped with Tasers by end of 2025 Advertisement "Anyone who files a complaint, or who is a victim of a crime, or even just happens to be in the wrong place at the wrong time can attract police attention via this software," according to GFF lawyer Franziska Görlitz. The GFF has filed a constitutional complaint against the large-scale data analysis in Bavaria on the basis that it breaches the fundamental right to informational self-determination and the confidentiality of telecommunications, which is guaranteed in the German constitution. Are there additional concerns specific to Palantir as a company? Palantir is tightly linked to US military and intelligence agencies, with founder Peter Thiel, a controversial figure known for authoritarian leanings, deeply involved. Kurz describes Palantir as the "AI arms dealer of the 21st century," warning German authorities of the geopolitical and legal risks in handing sensitive police data to a US company subject to conflicting foreign laws and interests. In an interview with the Weizenbaum Institute, she raised concerns about digital sovereignty, potential data transfers to the US, and insufficient democratic control over surveillance technologies. Advertisement Palantir is named after the 'seeing stones' in Tolkien's Lord of the Rings. Gotham prompts images of Batman and the company's apparent determination to make itself indispensable to multiple armed forces and law enforcement agencies in multiple countries has prompted comparisons with Skynet in the Terminator films. READ ALSO: What are the digital IDs you can get in Germany? Despite these touches of fantasy, however, Palantir is a very real company. Given its military origins (in Afghanistan in 2003), and its CEO Alex Karp's open acknowledgment of his company's role in helping 'kill bad guys faster,' the line it seeks to walk between enhanced security and invasive control raises numerous ethical and constitutional questions. In 2009, six years after founding Palantir, Peter Thiel published an essay (The Education of a Libertarian) in which he wrote: 'I no longer believe that freedom and democracy are compatible.' What happens next? Currently, Palantir shows no signs of slowing its expansion. The company experienced a 340 percent increase in valuation in 2024, supported by long-term contracts with numerous police and military organizations worldwide. In the United States, its Gotham software is employed by agencies including the FBI, Department of Homeland Security, NSA, and multiple military branches for tasks ranging from counterterrorism and intelligence analysis to fraud investigations. READ ALSO: Are German police racially profiling people at the border? In Europe, besides Germany, Gotham supports Europol, Norwegian Customs, and Denmark's predictive policing platform POL-INTEL. Beyond Europe, the software is used by Ukraine to improve military targeting and document war crimes during the Russian war of aggression.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store