AI for Future Success in Education

Empower every K–12 student to truly use AI as a learning partner—connecting it to real learning, building ethical awareness, and preparing for future success.

What is AI Literacy?

As Artificial Intelligence(AI) becomes part of daily learning, students need more than a basic definition. AI literacyin education goes beyond knowing what AI is—it means learning to use AI as a true partner: to communicate effectively, apply functional AI in real learning scenarios, question its outputs, and use it responsibly. This approach to AI literacy development is crucial for students to thrive in an increasingly AI-driven world.

Exemplar Unit

Why AI Literacy Matters

AI is entering classrooms faster than schools can keep up. Students are already experimenting with AI tools, but without guidance they risk relying on shortcuts or developing unsafe habits. Yet most schools lack ready-to-use lessons, leaving teachers without the time or resources to design AI literacy from scratch.

Our K–12 AI Literacy Curriculum is ready to use, future-focused, and integrated across subjects. It gives teachers a clear pathway to help students grow—from early curiosity to confident, responsible, and future-ready success with AI.

Our Solution

Our K–12 Curriculum Pathway

From kindergarten through high school, our curriculum provides a clear, inclusive pathway—helping every student, regardless of background or ability, first recognize AI, then use it meaningfully, and ultimately engage with it responsibly and ethically. This approach ensures that all learners develop crucial AI literacy skills throughout their education.

To make this pathway real, AI is woven into real subject learning—so students don’t just learn about AI, they practice using it meaningfully and responsibly, building habits that carry across every subject and beyond.

K-2: AI Around Us

This unit makes the abstract idea of "AI" playful and tangible for young learners. They explore the difference between natural, man-made, and "smart" machines, begin noticing AI helpers in daily life, and practice early safety habits, laying the foundation for responsible AI literacy.

In the Classroom:
  • ELA: Through simple writing tasks (like describing a favorite animal), children explore when AI can support writing and practice how to ask clearly, check carefully, and keep their own ideas central.
  • Math: Through word problems, they use AI to restate or model steps in kid-friendly ways—deepening understanding of how to solve, not just getting the answer.
  • Science: Through simple experiments and predictions (like sink or float), they compare their own results with AI’s guesses—learning to trust evidence and strengthening understanding of scientific thinking.
Grades 3-6 · Exploring the World of AI

Students deepen understanding of predictive vs. generative AI, explore how data and algorithms shape outcomes, and build prompting skills to communicate effectively. They test AI as a learning coach across subjects, always keeping their own reasoning central.

In the Classroom:
  • ELA: Through creative writing tasks, students practice when AI can suggest ideas or help structure text—while refining prompts to stay clear authors of their work.
  • Math: In real-life problems (like planning a class event with a budget), students use AI to check calculations or explore alternate strategies—learning to verify answers and decide when AI adds genuine value.
  • Science: In experiments (such as melting tests), they compare AI’s predictions with evidence from their own investigations—strengthening habits of questioning and evidence-based reasoning.
Grades 7-12 · Shaping Success with AI

Students examine how AI works (data, algorithms, predictive vs. generative), confront risks like bias, hallucinations, and deepfakes, and apply advanced prompting and evaluation. They connect subject tasks to real-world issues, culminating in a PSA project advocating responsible AI use.

In the Classroom:
  • ELA: In argumentative and research writing, students test AI as a brainstorming or revision partner—learning to evaluate sources, detect hallucinations, and integrate AI responsibly without losing their own voice.
  • Science: In labs and data analysis, students use AI to critique designs, suggest improvements, or polish reports—while keeping hypotheses, methods, and conclusions firmly in human hands.

How We Support Schools & Teachers

Designed to be practical, flexible, and future-focused—our curriculum equips schools with solutions and teachers with everything they need to bring AI literacy into the classroom.

1

Ready-to-use resources

Access teacher slides, formative assessments, and EduProtocols-based activities—everything designed for immediate classroom use in teaching AI.

2

Adapt to your Portrait of a Graduate (coming soon)

Connect AI Literacy with your school or school district’s Portrait of a Graduate (PoG), reinforcing the future-ready skills every student needs.

3

Adapt for Inclusive Learning (coming soon)

Flexibly adapt our AI Literacy Curriculum to the unique needs of your classroom—aligned with Universal Design for Learning (UDL) and Culturally and Linguistically Responsive (CLR) practices—so every student is fully supported.

4

AI-powered planning

Instantly create a customized AI Literacy unit—built around your goals and students—in just 8 minutes.

What Students Gain

Students don’t just learn about AI—they gain the skills to use it wisely, apply it meaningfully, and grow into confident, future-ready learners.

Truly Using AI

Go beyond shortcuts to engage AI as a true learning partner, applying it meaningfully instead of relying passively.

Confident & Responsible Use

Build safe, ethical, and thoughtful practices for AI—habits that last across school and life.

Future-ready Growth

Build the critical thinking, creativity, and adaptability needed to succeed in college, career, and citizenship in an AI-driven world.

Lead the Way with AI Literacy

AI is already here. The real question is: will students rely on it passively—or learn to use it as a powerful partner for thinking, creating, and preparing for the future? Start giving your students the skills to thrive in an AI-driven world—today.