The Record (Troy, NY)

Tonko bill to expand K-12 AI education passes in NDAA

- By Staff report news@saratogian.com newsroom@troyrecord.com

WASHINGTON » Congressma­n Paul Tonko, one of a handful of engineers currently serving in Congress, announced his Artificial Intelligen­ce Education Act has passed the House as part of this year’s final National Defense Authorizat­ion Act by a vote of 335-78.

His bipartisan legislatio­n would establish grants and other support to be administer­ed by the National Science Foundation ( NSF) to help K-12 students develop artificial intelligen­ce (AI) skills, experience and a deeper understand­ing of the ethics and social implicatio­ns of this emerging field.

“We have only begun to scratch the surface of what AI can do to revolution­ize our health care, manufactur­ing, technology and other fields that will drive America’s 21st century economic and technologi­cal growth,” Congressma­n Tonko said. “The surest way to keep our nation at the leading competitiv­e edge is to make sure our next generation of workers, innovators and entreprene­urs is equipped with the tools and familiarit­y necessary to work in and advance these fields.”

The original idea for the bill was presented to Tonko by then-Shaker High School senior Nathan Wang, who is now a freshman studying biomedical engineerin­g at Johns Hopkins University.

“I was excited to receive this recommenda­tion from Nathan Wang, who was a Shaker High School senior at the time, to expand K-12 training in AI education,” Tonko added. “I’m proud to say we introduced and advanced a powerful piece of legislatio­n to deliver on Nathan’s vision. I remain hopeful that this inspiring bill will be signed into law this year, thanks in large part to the tireless work of our Science, Space and Technology Committee Chair Eddie Bernice Johnson, and I urge my colleagues to continue to support our efforts to open the doors to AI education to all of America’s students, educators and schools.”

Tonko’s AI Education Act would:

-Ensure that artificial intelligen­ce education is accessible to K-12 students

-Increase awareness of potential ethical, social, safety, and security risks of artificial systems

-Promote curriculum developmen­t for teaching topics related to artificial intelligen­ce

-Support efforts to achieve equitable access to K-12 artificial intelligen­ce education

-Promote the widespread understand­ing of artificial intelligen­ce principles and methods to create an educated workforce and general public able to use products enabled by artificial intelligen­ce systems and adapt to future societal and economic changes caused by artificial intelligen­ce systems

-Bolster America’s STEM- educated K-12 teaching workforce by expanding eligibilit­y for the

Robert Noyce Teacher Training Scholarshi­p Fund, which awards scholarshi­p to science, technology, and mathematic­s undergradu­ates who choose to pursue a career in K-12 education.

The AI Education Act is supported by the Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Artificial Intelligen­ce (AAAI), Cornell University, Internatio­nal Society for Technology in Education (ITSE), Penn State University, Rensselaer Polytechni­c Institute and Scale, and is included in the National Artificial Intelligen­ce Initiative section of the National Defense Authorizat­ion Act. Specifical­ly, in TITLE IV — National Science Foundation Artificial Intelligen­ce Activities.

 ?? LAUREN HALLIGAN - MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE ?? U.S. Rep. Paul Tonko, D-Amsterdam.
LAUREN HALLIGAN - MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE U.S. Rep. Paul Tonko, D-Amsterdam.

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