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AI invades classrooms: Trump’s big plan for America’s schools

AI is about to Become the New Kid in Class

BY YAHYA KARIM

A new order from the top

President Donald Trump just signed a bold executive order, “Advancing Artificial Intelligence Education for American Youth.” The goal? Get AI into every classroom, fast. From kindergarten to high school, students (and teachers) will be learning, using, and maybe even battle AI every day.

“From tutoring students to grading papers, AI could soon become the teacher’s busiest assistant—or biggest headache.”

Meet the AI task force

To make this all possible, a tech version of the averages will be assembled in OpenAI, Microsoft, and Nvidia. Their job? Create partnerships and build tools that teach students how AI works—and how to think critically about it. Even the Department of Agriculture somehow got invited to this party.

What could possibly go wrong?

“From tutoring students to grading papers, AI could soon become the teacher’s busiest assistant—or biggest headache.”

There are a lot of unanswered questions. No one really knows which companies will lead, how much it’ll cost, or whether schools will have to dig into their already empty pockets. Plus, there’s real concern about kids using AI to cheat, or becoming way too dependent on it.

Schools are already struggling

Teachers are quitting, class sizes are more than ever, and many schools are facing budget problems. In fact, 86% of U.S. districts can’t find enough teachers. Many leaders hope AI will be able to fill in some of the gaps, acting like a digital assistant, but critics warn it could make a broken system even more chaotic.

Project Stargate: The bigger game

Trump’s classroom AI pushes ties into Project Stargate, a $500 billion investment plan to dominate the global AI race. Schools are just the start. Big tech companies see students as future customers, and they’re racing to get their software into every school desk.

Will AI save the day—or break it?

Education Secretary Linda McMahon is optimistic, picturing classrooms where every kid has a personal AI tutor, but early studies say too much AI can kill critical thinking skills. Nobody really knows how growing up with AI will shape young minds.

One thing’s for sure: whether we’re ready for it or not, AI is about to become the new kid in class.

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