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Adult guiding a child’s hands as they read from a Braille book on a wooden table, showing shared touch reading and support for a visually impaired learner.
Hands on the page today, AI in your ear tomorrow – Xiaoxing turns reading support into a team effort.

07 December 2025 - AI News Quiz for Children Aged 7-11 Years Old

Welcome to our AI News Quiz for children aged 7–11! Every question in this quiz is based on a real news story about artificial intelligence, from helpful hospital tools to clever reading buddies. You don’t need to be a tech expert – just bring your curiosity and imagination.

For each question, choose the answer you think is right. If you’re not sure, take a guess anyway and see what happens. After you answer, we’ll tell you straight away whether you were correct and give you a short, friendly explanation so you can learn something new about AI each time.

1 .
What strange trick did some robot dogs with famous faces show off at a big art show?
They chased their tails in circles for hours.
They handed out free mobile phones to visitors.
They “pooped out” art pictures made by AI cameras.
They performed a 10-minute dance to loud techno music.
On 4 December 2025, artist Beeple showed robot dogs at Art Basel Miami Beach. The dogs have heads that look like tech billionaires, take photos with cameras on their chests and use AI to turn them into artwork that’s printed out of their backsides like “poop”.
2 .
What are UK leaders thinking about doing with some AI chatbots that might upset children?
Make stricter rules for unsafe chatbots.
Give every child a free robot friend to talk to all night.
Turn off all chatbots in the whole country forever.
Ask children to write polite letters asking chatbots to behave.
UK leaders are worried that some AI chatbots could give children dangerous advice that might hurt them. Technology Secretary Liz Kendall told MPs she wants to close gaps in the Online Safety Act so these bots follow strict safety rules. She’s also backing a public campaign to help families understand the risks and stay safe online.
3 .
What is special about the new AI helper called “Xiaoxing”?
It’s a robot that delivers snacks to school classrooms.
It’s an AI reading buddy that helps blind children enjoy books.
It’s a game where children teach a robot dog to skateboard.
It’s a homework app that does all your science experiments for you.
China has launched “Xiaoxing”, its first accessible AI reading companion made especially for blind children. It works on phones and computers, answering questions about books and helping children understand stories more easily and with more feeling. It’s free to use and aims to make reading fairer for everyone.
4 .
What did students do at a new “AI Enterprise Challenge” day in London?
They trained robots to mark everyone’s PE scores.
They built an AI that only recommends extra homework.
They worked in teams to design AI ideas to make school life better.
They worked in teams to design AI ideas to make school life better.
On 3 December 2025, over 50 students from Southwark schools met at Kingswood Arts in London for an “AI Enterprise Challenge”. Mixed teams designed AI ideas for use in schools, planned who might use them and discussed the ethics, like fairness and safety. It helped young people see how AI could solve real school problems.
5 .
At a special AI Energy Council meeting in London, what big problem were UK ministers trying to solve?
How to make robots good at playing football for the national team.
How to teach AI to mark every school test in the country.
How to get enough clean power for new AI data centres.
How to turn every lamppost into a chatting street robot for tourists.
On 2 December 2025, UK ministers met the AI Energy Council in London to talk about electricity for AI. They discussed speeding up grid upgrades and making sure there is enough clean power for new data centres, without stressing the national grid or harming climate goals.
6 .
How is a new NHS AI tool helping stroke patients in England?
It reminds them to drink more water every morning.
It sends them funny cat videos to cheer them up.
It teaches them calm breathing exercises during TV advert breaks.
It quickly reads brain scans so doctors can spot clots and rush patients for treatment.
On 2 December 2025, NHS England shared results from a big study of an AI tool that helps doctors read stroke brain scans in minutes. It means patients can be sent faster to specialist hospitals for clot-removal treatment, giving many more people the chance to walk, talk and live independently again.
7 .
According to a new study, what are more family doctors (GPs) in the UK starting to do during their appointments?
Using AI tools in appointments to help with notes and ideas.
Letting AI choose which patients get to see the doctor first every day.
Replacing every receptionist with a talking robot that never takes a tea break.
Asking AI which biscuits to serve in the waiting room.
A new study by the Nuffield Trust and Royal College of GPs found that almost three in ten UK family doctors now use AI tools like ChatGPT during patient consultations. They mainly use them to summarise appointments, draft letters and double-check ideas, while still making the final decisions themselves.
8 .
What did a new United Nations report warn about AI and the world’s countries?
That AI will magically give every country the same amount of money.
That all robots should be banned from rich countries only.
That AI will make homework disappear for every child on Earth.
That AI could let rich countries race ahead while poorer ones get left behind.
A new report from the United Nations Development Programme says AI could create a “great divergence” between countries. If rich countries get all the powerful AI and poorer ones lack internet, skills and rules, gaps in money, health and education could grow again. Leaders are urged to share AI fairly.
9 .
At a big wildlife meeting in Samarkand, how are people using AI and drones to help animals?
By teaching parrots to order their own jungle snacks online.
By spotting illegal wildlife trading and tracking endangered animals.
By giving lions flying lessons so they can avoid traffic jams.
By running a global fashion show for pets in tiny sunglasses and hats.
At the CITES COP20 wildlife conference in Samarkand, experts explained how AI and drones are now used to watch borders, scan camera traps and track rare animals. These smart tools help catch wildlife smugglers and protect species at risk of extinction, like orangutans and rare birds.
10 .
Why did the New York Times start a big court fight with the AI company Perplexity?
It says Perplexity used its news stories without asking.
It was furious that Perplexity’s robots kept delivering pizzas to the wrong office every day.
It wanted Perplexity to promise to print a giant front-page apology in glitter letters on every paper it sells around the world.
It claimed Perplexity had secretly replaced all its human journalists with badly dressed robot reporters who only write about houseplants.
On 5 December 2025, the New York Times filed a lawsuit against AI startup Perplexity, saying it copied and shared millions of its articles without permission to train and run AI tools. The paper also says Perplexity sometimes invents fake stories but still uses the Times’ name, which could mislead readers.
Author:  Tara Kemp

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