If you”ve been using Google Forms for any length of time, you know the drill. Open a blank form. Type out your questions one by one. Format the response options. Adjust the settings. Share the link. Repeat next week.
It works. But it’s not exactly fast.
In February 2026, Google changed the game. Gemini AI is now built directly into Google Forms, and it’s not just a small upgrade — it fundamentally changes how quickly you can create, distribute, and analyze forms. Whether you’re a classroom teacher building exit tickets or an instructional coach designing PD feedback surveys, this update is worth your attention.
I’ve been testing these features since they rolled out and using them in my classroom, and in this post, I’m breaking down everything you need to know: what’s new, how it works, what it can’t do yet, and how to start using it in your building this week.
What Changed: Gemini Comes to Google Forms
Google has been steadily weaving Gemini into the Workspace suite — first in Gmail, then Docs, Sheets, and Slides. Now it’s Google Forms’ turn, and the integration goes deeper than you might expect.
Here’s what landed in early 2026:
- “Help Me Create” Form Generation — Describe what you need in plain language, and Gemini builds a complete form draft for you. Quiz, survey, feedback form, needs assessment — you name it.
- “Suggest Questions” Feature — Already have a form started? Gemini analyzes your existing content and suggests additional questions, new question types, and answer options you might not have considered.
- AI Summary of Responses — Once responses come in, Gemini can generate a summary of key themes from open-ended answers. No more reading through 47 paragraph responses one at a time.
- Create Forms from Drive Files — This one’s a game-changer for coaches. Feed Gemini an existing Google Doc, Slides deck, Sheet, or even a PDF, and it will generate a form based on that content.
- Gemini 3 Deep Think Integration — Forms now connects to Gemini’s advanced reasoning engine for higher accuracy in question generation and response analysis.
- Enhanced Security Controls — New settings give administrators better control over form access and data handling.
That’s a lot. Let’s break down the features that matter most for your classroom and your coaching work.
“Help Me Create”: From Blank Form to Ready-to-Share in 60 Seconds
This is the headline feature, and it’s the one you’ll use most.
Click the “Help me create” button in a new Google Form, type a description of what you need, and Gemini generates a complete draft — questions, answer options, structure, and all.
Here’s what makes it powerful for educators:
For Classroom Teachers
Imagine typing:
- “Create an exit ticket for a 7th grade science class on the water cycle with 3 multiple choice and 2 short answer questions”
- “Build a student self-reflection survey about group project collaboration”
- “Make a parent communication form for scheduling spring conferences”
In about 30 seconds, you have a working draft. Not a rough outline — an actual form with thoughtful questions, logical flow, and appropriate response types. You’ll still want to customize it (more on that in a moment), but the heavy lifting is done.
For Instructional Coaches
This is where it gets really interesting. Try prompts like:
- “Create a professional development needs assessment survey for K-8 teachers covering technology integration, classroom management, and differentiated instruction”
- “Build a classroom observation feedback form with sections for instruction, engagement, and environment”
- “Generate a coaching cycle check-in form for bi-weekly meetings with new teachers”
Forms that used to take 20-30 minutes to build from scratch? Done in under a minute. And because Gemini understands context, the questions it generates are actually relevant — not generic boilerplate.
Creating Forms from Existing Files: Your Docs Just Got Smarter
Here’s the feature that doesn’t get enough attention: Gemini can build a form directly from a file in your Google Drive.
Upload or link a Google Doc, Slides deck, Sheet, or PDF, and Gemini will analyze the content and generate a corresponding form. Think about what this means:
- Have a PD handout? Turn it into a follow-up reflection form.
- Have a lesson plan in Docs? Generate a student comprehension check.
- Have a Slides presentation from a workshop? Create a post-session feedback survey.
- Have a PDF of your district’s technology standards? Build a self-assessment form for teachers.
This isn’t just a time-saver — it’s a workflow connector. The content you’ve already created becomes the foundation for new tools, without starting from zero.
“Suggest Questions”: Your AI Thought Partner
Already working on a form and feeling stuck? The Suggest Questions feature is like having a colleague look over your shoulder and say, “Hey, have you thought about asking this?”
Gemini analyzes your existing questions and suggests:
- New questions that fill gaps in your form
- Different question types you might not have considered (maybe a linear scale instead of multiple choice)
- Additional answer options for existing questions
This is especially useful when you’re building something complex — like a comprehensive needs assessment or a multi-section evaluation — and you want to make sure you’re not missing anything important.
PD Tip for Coaches: When introducing this feature to your teachers, frame it as a brainstorming partner, not a replacement. Teachers should still review and customize every suggestion. The AI gets you 80% of the way there — your expertise handles the last 20%.
AI Response Summaries: Stop Reading 50 Responses One at a Time
If you’ve ever sent a Google Form with open-ended questions to your entire staff, you know the pain. Dozens (or hundreds) of paragraph responses. Important insights buried in walls of text. By the time you’ve read them all, you’ve forgotten what the first person said.
Gemini’s AI Summary feature changes this completely.
Once responses come in, Gemini can:
- Identify key themes across all open-ended responses
- Surface patterns — what are people saying most often?
- Highlight outliers — what unique perspectives came through?
- Handle spelling variations — “profesional development,” “PD,” and “prof dev” all get grouped together
For instructional coaches, this is massive. After a PD session, instead of spending an hour reading through every response, you get a summary of the major takeaways in seconds. You can quickly identify what resonated, what confused people, and what needs follow-up — then adjust your next session accordingly.
What Gemini in Google Forms Can’t Do (Yet)
Let’s be honest about the limitations, because knowing what the tool doesn’t do is just as important as knowing what it does.
As of early 2026, Gemini in Google Forms cannot:
- ❌ Set answer keys or point values — If you’re building a graded quiz, you’ll still need to configure correct answers and scoring manually.
- ❌ Configure quiz-specific settings — Things like “release score immediately” or “show correct answers after submission” still require manual setup.
- ❌ Create question banks or randomization — No automatic question pools or randomized question order.
- ❌ Generate automatic feedback — You can’t yet have Gemini write custom feedback for correct/incorrect answers.
This matters most for teachers using Google Forms for formal assessments. The AI can create quiz questions quickly, but the grading configuration is still a manual process.
My expectation: Google will close these gaps. The classroom assessment workflow is too important to leave unfinished. But for now, plan accordingly — use Gemini to draft the questions, then spend your saved time on the scoring setup.
How to Bring This to Your Building: A PD Starter Plan
If you’re an instructional coach reading this and thinking, “I need to show my teachers this” — here’s a quick framework for introducing Gemini in Google Forms during your next PD session or coaching meeting.
The 15-Minute Demo
- Show, don’t tell (3 min) — Open Google Forms, click “Help me create,” and type a prompt live. Let teachers watch the form build itself in real time. The reaction alone is worth the demo.
- Try it together (7 min) — Have teachers open Google Forms on their own devices and generate a form related to something they’re actually teaching this week. Real context beats hypothetical examples.
- Share and compare (5 min) — Have 2-3 teachers share what Gemini generated. Discuss what worked, what needed tweaking, and where teachers added their own expertise.
The Follow-Up Challenge
Send teachers away with this simple challenge: “Replace one form you were going to build from scratch this week with a Gemini-generated draft. Time yourself. Report back.”
When they come back and tell you they saved 15 minutes, they’ll be hooked.
The Coaching Conversation Starters
- “What form do you rebuild every marking period that Gemini could draft for you?”
- “If you could get a summary of your exit ticket responses in 30 seconds instead of 30 minutes, how would that change your instruction?”
- “What’s one thing you wish you had a form for but never had time to create?”
Who Has Access? (Plans, Versions, and Requirements)
This is one of the most common questions educators ask — and the answer depends on your Google Workspace plan. Gemini features in Google Forms are not included with every Google account. Here’s exactly what you need.
For K-12 Schools and Districts
Gemini in Google Forms requires one of the following:
- Google Workspace for Education Plus with the Google AI Pro for Education add-on (this is the most common path for districts)
- Teaching & Learning Upgrade — some Gemini features are available to users 18 and older for a limited time (at least through May 2026)
The free Google Workspace for Education Fundamentals plan does not include Gemini in Forms. If your district is on Fundamentals, you won’t see the AI features — even if you have a personal Gemini account.
For Business and Higher Ed Users
- Google Workspace Business Standard, Business Plus, or Enterprise with a Google AI Pro or Google AI Ultra add-on
Important Details Educators Should Know
RequirementDetailsMinimum ageUsers must be 18 or older to access Gemini features in Education plansAdmin activationYour IT admin must enable the Gemini add-on at the organizational unit level — even if your district has Education Plus, the feature may not be turned on yetDesktop onlyGemini in Forms is currently available on desktop only — not on the Google Forms mobile appRollout statusStill rolling out gradually — some eligible users may not have access yet
The Quick Check
Not sure if you have access? Here’s the fastest way to find out:
- Open Google Forms on your computer
- Start a new blank form
- Look for the “Help me create” button
- If it’s there, you’re good to go. If not, reach out to your IT administrator and ask about your district’s Gemini add-on status.
Coaching tip: If you’re planning a PD session on this topic, check with your IT team before the session to confirm that teachers’ accounts have Gemini enabled. Nothing derails a tech demo faster than half the room not having access.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Gemini create quizzes with correct answers already set?
Not yet. Gemini can generate quiz questions and answer options, but you’ll need to manually set the answer key, point values, and feedback. Google is expected to add this capability in a future update.
Does Gemini work with Google Forms in Google Classroom?
Yes. Any form you create with Gemini can be assigned through Google Classroom just like any other Google Form. The AI features are in the form builder — how you distribute it doesn’t change.
Can I use Gemini to analyze responses from forms I’ve already sent?
Yes! The AI Summary feature works on any form with responses, including forms created before the Gemini update. Open your form, go to the Responses tab, and look for the summary option.
Is student data safe when using Gemini in Google Forms?
Google’s Gemini features in Workspace for Education follow the same data processing agreements and privacy commitments as other Workspace tools. Gemini does not use student data to train its models. However, always check with your district’s data privacy officer about specific policies.
What’s the difference between “Help me create” and “Suggest Questions”?
“Help me create” generates an entire form from scratch based on your prompt. “Suggest Questions” adds new questions to a form you’ve already started building. Use “Help me create” when starting fresh and “Suggest Questions” when you want to expand or improve an existing form.
Your Next Step: Try It Right Now
You don’t need to wait for a PD day or a coaching meeting. Open Google Forms right now and try this:
- Go to forms.google.com
- Click the blank form with the + icon
- Look for the “Help me create” button
- Type: “Create a 5-question exit ticket for [your subject] about [your current topic]”
- Review what Gemini generates — then customize it to fit your students
The whole process takes about two minutes. And once you see how fast it is, you’ll wonder how you ever built forms without it.
Want to Go Deeper?
This post covered the what and why of Gemini in Google Forms. Ready for the how?
Up next in this series: (Coming Soon!)
- How to Create AI-Powered Forms, Quizzes, and Surveys with Gemini in Google Forms (Step-by-Step) — A hands-on tutorial walking through every feature with examples you can copy and use today.
- 5 Ways Instructional Coaches Can Use Gemini in Google Forms to Save Time and Improve Feedback — Coaching-specific strategies for building forms, analyzing data, and scaling your impact.
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