HR-5351-119
Ordered to be Reported in the Nature of a Substitute (Amended) by the Yeas and Nays: 33 - 0.
Sponsored by Vince Fong (R-CA)
What it does
This bill would expand the National Science Foundation's authority to fund scholarships and fellowships for undergraduate and graduate students pursuing artificial intelligence-related fields, and professional development fellowships for K-12 teachers, school counselors, faculty, and industry professionals. It would also establish up to eight regional "Centers of AI Excellence" at community colleges and career and technical education schools, and authorize competitive research grants to study how AI can be integrated into K-12 classrooms. The bill would also authorize NSF to run a nationwide outreach campaign to raise awareness of AI education opportunities.
Who benefits
Undergraduate and graduate students at colleges and universities, including community colleges, who receive scholarships or fellowships. K-12 teachers, school counselors, and other school professionals who receive professional development funding. Industry professionals who receive fellowships to teach at academic institutions. Community colleges and career and technical education schools designated as Centers of AI Excellence. Institutions in rural areas, Tribal Colleges and Universities, and schools in EPSCoR jurisdictions that receive targeted outreach. Nonprofit organizations and private-sector companies that partner with institutions on AI education programs. Students in K-12 schools who would benefit from better-trained teachers and improved AI curricula. Workers in AI-adjacent fields such as advanced manufacturing and agriculture who may benefit from a larger trained workforce.
Who is hurt
Institutions and applicants that do not receive competitive awards, including those that may be disadvantaged by the bill's preference for rural, tribal, and EPSCoR-jurisdiction schools. Taxpayers who bear the cost of new federal spending. Non-AI STEM fields that may compete with AI programs for limited NSF funding and institutional attention. Foreign nationals studying in the U.S. who are ineligible for scholarships and fellowships under the bill's citizenship and permanent residency requirement. Private-sector AI training providers who may face increased competition from federally subsidized academic programs.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the United States faces a significant shortage of AI-skilled workers across sectors including manufacturing, agriculture, and education, and that federal investment in pipeline development is necessary to maintain global competitiveness. They contend that by directing outreach to community colleges, rural institutions, and Tribal Colleges, the bill broadens access to AI education beyond elite research universities, helping close workforce and equity gaps simultaneously. Supporters also argue that funding research on how AI affects K-12 learning outcomes addresses a genuine knowledge gap, since AI tools are already entering classrooms with little evidence-based guidance for teachers.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill creates a new layer of federally directed education spending without clear evidence that NSF scholarship programs produce durable workforce outcomes, and that the seven-year reporting timeline delays meaningful accountability. They contend that the bill's broad, discretionary grant authorities — covering everything from K-12 curricula to industry fellowships — lack specific performance benchmarks, making it difficult to evaluate whether federal dollars are being used effectively. Opponents may also argue that workforce development for a rapidly evolving commercial technology like AI is better left to market-driven industry training programs rather than government-funded academic pipelines that may lag behind industry needs.