AI literacy is arriving in
K–12 classrooms — unevenly.
Ten states have enacted AI literacy legislation. Nineteen have issued formal guidance. Eleven have pending bills. Every district is navigating this transition on its own timeline — and what gets implemented in Sacramento looks nothing like what gets implemented in rural Ohio.
AI is already in classrooms.
The question is what students and educators know about it.
A Pew survey found that more than half of U.S. teens have used AI tools for schoolwork. Their teachers, by and large, received no structured preparation to guide that use. State policy is catching up — but implementation is happening district by district, and the gap between policy and practice is widening.
Students are using AI already
By high school, most students have used AI tools for homework, research, or writing assistance. Whether they use AI well — critically, ethically, effectively — depends on what they were taught.
Educators are expected to guide it
Teachers are navigating AI in the classroom right now. Almost none received formal preparation to evaluate AI tools, set academic integrity expectations, or integrate AI into instruction responsibly.
Policy is fragmented
Some states have enacted binding AI literacy requirements. Others have voluntary guidance. Some have nothing on the books. Every district needs to understand what their state expects — and what it will expect in 2027–2028.
Where your state stands
on K–12 AI literacy.
ZeroBlue tracks K–12 AI literacy legislation, state DOE guidance, and pending bills across all 50 states. Click a state with a published research brief for a full district-readiness analysis.
Three audiences.
One platform.
Whether you’re a district leader evaluating AI literacy vendors, an educator looking to build your own practice, or a parent trying to understand what your child is (or isn’t) being taught — ZeroBlue has a path for you.
Site-license your whole district.
Band-specific educator certifications, student certifications across K–12, ambassador program access, a private district community, and federal funding eligibility documentation — all under one annual license.
See District Licensing →Certify the band you teach.
Four band-specific AI literacy certifications for educators: Elementary (K–2), Upper Elementary (3–5), Middle School (6–8), and High School (9–12). Six modules plus a performance capstone. Self-paced. PD hours documented.
See Educator Certification →Read the research.
ZeroBlue’s 50-state K–12 AI readiness research and the full white paper are available for district curriculum teams, academic researchers, and parents who want to understand what’s actually happening in their state.
Browse Research →Ready to bring AI literacy
to your district?
Whether you’re starting with educator PD, student certifications, or a whole-district site license — the conversation starts with a 30-minute demo.
