As of June 2026, Kindergarten Teachers, Except Special Education has an AI-exposure score of 44/100 (Moderate exposure) on the AI-Safe Careers index, blending O*NET tasks, the Anthropic Economic Index, the Penn/OpenAI study, and BLS data. This is an estimate of task exposure, not a prediction of job loss.

AI Exposure Score for

Kindergarten Teachers, Except Special Education

44/100
Moderate exposure
LowModerateElevatedHighVery High

More exposed than 17% of the roles we track. Median pay ~US$62,680. About 12,800 projected openings a year (BLS 2024–34 — growth plus replacement).

Pay & demand figures are US medians (BLS, in USD) — your local figures will differ. Your exposure score applies broadly.

Where are you in your career? (optional — tailors the context)

How you compare to similar Education roles

Kindergarten Teachers, Except Special Education (you)
44
Special Education Teachers, Preschool
45
Elementary School Teachers, Except Special Education
46
Art, Drama, and Music Teachers, Postsecondary
47
Adapted Physical Education Specialists
41
Career/Technical Education Teachers, Secondary School
48
Know someone whose job is changing? Share your score.
Post Share Score card
Every share sends them to their own free scan.
Create a free account to follow this role and get weekly AI-safe matches.

Your tasks, by AI exposure

Automatable

No automatable tasks identified for this role — its real, individually-assessed tasks consistently read as durable (95%).

Augmentable
  • Maintain accurate and complete student records and prepare reports on children and activities as required by laws, district policies, and administrative regulations.
Durable
  • Establish clear objectives for all lessons, units, and projects and communicate those objectives to children.
  • Instruct and monitor students in the use and care of equipment and materials to prevent injuries and damage.
  • Use computers, audio-visual aids, and other equipment and materials to supplement presentations.
  • Provide a variety of materials and resources for children to explore, manipulate, and use, both in learning activities and in imaginative play.
  • Observe and evaluate children's performance, behavior, social development, and physical health.
  • Demonstrate activities to children.
  • Prepare children for later grades by encouraging them to explore learning opportunities and to persevere with challenging tasks.
  • Meet with other professionals to discuss individual students' needs and progress.
  • Meet with parents and guardians to discuss their children's progress and to determine their priorities for their children and their resource needs.
  • Establish and enforce rules for behavior and policies and procedures to maintain order among students.
  • Prepare and implement remedial programs for students requiring extra help.
  • Guide and counsel students with adjustment or academic problems or special academic interests.
  • Read books to entire classes or to small groups.
  • Plan and conduct activities for a balanced program of instruction, demonstration, and work time that provides students with opportunities to observe, question, and investigate.
  • Identify children showing signs of emotional, developmental, or health-related problems and discuss them with supervisors, parents or guardians, and child development specialists.
  • Instruct students individually and in groups, adapting teaching methods to meet students' varying needs and interests.
  • Teach basic skills, such as color, shape, number and letter recognition, personal hygiene, and social skills.
  • Organize and lead activities designed to promote physical, mental, and social development, such as games, arts and crafts, music, and storytelling.
  • Confer with parents or guardians, other teachers, counselors, and administrators to resolve students' behavioral and academic problems.

Safer adjacent roles

Elementary School Teachers, Except Special Education
80% skills overlap · Moderate exposure · ~US$63,970
46
Preschool Teachers, Except Special Education
72% skills overlap · Low exposure · ~US$38,140
37
Middle School Teachers, Except Special and Career/Technical Education
64% skills overlap · Elevated exposure · ~US$64,370
52
Secondary School Teachers, Except Special and Career/Technical Education
56% skills overlap · Elevated exposure · ~US$72,040
53
Special Education Teachers, Secondary School
48% skills overlap · Moderate exposure · ~US$74,260
48
Special Education Teachers, Middle School
40% skills overlap · Elevated exposure · ~US$66,810
50

Your AI-Safe Career Report

Every task scored with what to do about it · 5–10 safer roles with salary, demand & reachability · skill-gap map · a 30/60/90-day roadmap · plus a résumé & LinkedIn rewrite · PDF.
Grounded in O*NET + the Anthropic Economic Index + BLS — personalized to your role.

Workers with AI skills earn a roughly 62% wage premium — adapting pays. — PwC Global AI Jobs Barometer, 2026

Personalize it: paste your résumé & LinkedIn (optional) — your rewrite is included in the report
Used only to generate your report. You can delete it anytime via delete my data.
Personalize my plan (optional, 20 sec — tailors your safer roles & recommendation)
14-day money-back guarantee One-time · kept forever · no subscription

Instant delivery — your personalized report is ready about a minute after checkout.

Get ahead: a rising skill on this path is Social Perceptiveness. Explore courses →
Some course links are affiliate links — we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
Important: This is an estimate of AI exposure, not a prediction that your job will disappear. It is designed to help you understand how your role may change and improve your career resilience.