States push forward on classroom AI oversight |
U.S. states are pressing ahead with regulating the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in education, despite efforts by the Trump administration to limit state-level AI rules. During the last legislative session, more than 50 bills across 21 states addressed AI in schools, according to the Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT), focusing on areas such as AI literacy, student data privacy, transparency from education technology vendors, and limits on certain AI uses. While a federal executive order seeks to pause state AI regulations in favor of a national standard, advocates say states show no sign of slowing down. “We’re in the process of tracking basically what states are doing in this new session, and I will say they are going full steam ahead in trying to, again, put appropriate guardrails on the use of AI in education,” said Maddy Dwyer, policy analyst for equity in civic technology at the CDT. “In terms of the executive order … I think there’s some legal ambiguity. And states are definitely, at least on the education front, moving full steam ahead in the in the new session.”