HR-5584-119
Ordered to be Reported (Amended) by the Yeas and Nays: 34 - 1.
Sponsored by Thomas Kean (R-NJ)
What it does
The LIFT AI Act would authorize the Director of the National Science Foundation (NSF) to award competitive, merit-reviewed grants to colleges, universities, and nonprofit organizations to develop artificial intelligence literacy programs for K-12 students and educators. Funded activities would include curriculum development, teacher professional development, hands-on learning tools, and evaluation methods for measuring AI literacy. The bill does not specify a dollar amount for appropriations.
Who benefits
K-12 students nationwide who would gain access to AI literacy curricula. K-12 teachers and school administrators who would receive professional development and training. Colleges and universities that would receive NSF grant funding to develop programs. Nonprofit education organizations eligible to compete for awards. Technology and AI industry employers who would benefit from a more AI-literate future workforce. Rural and underserved school districts that may lack existing AI education resources and could benefit from new, freely developed curricula.
Who is hurt
Existing private ed-tech and curriculum companies that may face increased competition from publicly funded, freely available materials developed under these grants. Taxpayers who would bear the cost of the program, though no specific appropriation amount is stated in the bill. Organizations that do not meet the eligibility criteria (institutions of higher education or nonprofits) — such as for-profit companies — would be excluded from competing for awards.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that AI is already reshaping the economy and that the U.S. risks falling behind strategic competitors — including China, which has mandated AI education nationally — if it does not build AI literacy at the K-12 level. They contend that NSF's existing merit-review infrastructure ensures funds go to the most effective programs, and that early, structured exposure to AI concepts is essential to developing the next generation of American innovators and a workforce capable of competing in an AI-driven economy.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that education is constitutionally a state and local function under the Tenth Amendment, and that federal grant programs — even voluntary ones — can distort local curriculum priorities toward federally preferred content. They contend that without a specified appropriation, the bill may create an unfunded mandate or duplicative bureaucracy, and that the private sector and states are already developing AI education resources without federal direction, raising questions about whether a new NSF program is necessary or cost-effective.