UNESCO ICT in Education Prize
Descriptions
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Eligibility
Theme of the 2026 edition: Reimagining creativity and critical thinking with artificial intelligence
Education plays a pivotal role in redefining what it means to know, think critically, and imagine differently in the age of artificial intelligence (AI). As AI systems produce content and analysis with increasing fluency, they unsettle previous assumptions about creativity and knowledge. Yet AI systems cannot care, exercise judgment, or discern meaning. These capacities remain fundamentally human. Cultivating these abilities requires equipping learners to question algorithmic authority, identify bias and limitations, and combine imagination with ethical judgment. In doing so, education can ensure that AI is used as a tool for expanding human agency, rather than as a substitute for human thought.
In this context, the 2026 edition of the Prize focuses on the theme “Reimagining creativity and critical thinking with artificial intelligence”. It aims to surface and amplify evidence-based practices across diverse contexts that demonstrate how teachers and learners are engaging with AI systems in ways that encourage critical thinking, imagination and creativity.
Eligibility criteria
- Be relevant to the theme of the year
- The project should be ongoing for at least one year
- The project and its organization should not be affiliated to UNESCO or receive any funding from UNESCO
Focus and scope of submissions
Submissions should capture the strategies and techniques used to cultivate critical thinking, creative inquiry and imagination with AI. Each submission should provide insight into the following:
1. Contexts of AI use and co-creation
- The contexts in which teachers and learners use AI to harness critical thinking and creativity
2. Teaching strategies that cultivate critical thinking and creativity
- How teachers integrate AI tools to encourage learners to engage critically and creatively with AI
3. Learning with AI
- How students use AI to question, interrogate, explore, write, problem-solve or create
- How students grapple with difficult questions and resist the temptation to offload their thinking
- How AI affects motivation, participation, collaboration, and critical thinking
4. Assessment and evidence of critical thinking and creativity with AI
- How critical thinking and creativity with AI are assessed
- Qualitative or quantitative evidence, such as student work samples, reflections, and peer feedback
Summary
The UNESCO King Hamad Bin Isa Al-Khalifa Prize for the Use of ICT in Education recognizes innovative approaches in leveraging new technologies to expand educational and lifelong learning opportunities for all, in line with the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and its Goal 4 on education.
Established in 2005 with the support of the Kingdom of Bahrain, the Prize rewards individuals and organizations that are implementing outstanding projects and promoting the creative use of technologies to enhance learning, teaching and overall educational performance in the digital age. An international jury selects two best projects annually. Each prizewinner receives US$ 25,000, a medal and a diploma during a ceremony at UNESCO Headquarters in Paris. Every year the Prize has a specific theme, which, while being in line with UNESCO’s mandate and values, advocates for responsible and ethical use of information and communication technologies.
Guidelines
Selection criteria
- Learning contexts: Vivid descriptions of contexts and conditions under which AI is used to enable critical thinking and creativity
- Pedagogical innovation: Demonstrates creative, contextually-relevant integration of AI that cultivates critical thinking and creativity
- Evidence of learning: Provides clear qualitative or quantitative evidence of how students’ critical thinking and creative capabilities are developed through the use of AI
- Inclusion and equity: Reflects how AI was used to reach learners who are excluded, marginalized or disengaged
- Agency and voice: Highlights how learners exercise choice, curiosity and authorship in AI-supported learning
- Replicability: Offers insights into how the initiative can be adapted by other teachers in diverse classroom contexts