Education
Microsoft Launches $4B AI Initiative for Education
Microsoft has unveiled a monumental initiative to reshape the landscape of education through artificial intelligence, pledging a staggering $4 billion over the next five years to integrate AI tools and resources into schools, colleges, and nonprofit organizations.
This ambitious commitment, announced on July 9, 2025, aims to equip educators and students with cutting-edge technology, including cash grants, AI software, and cloud computing services, positioning Microsoft at the forefront of the digital transformation in education.
The scope of this investment is not merely financial but strategic, as the tech giant seeks to democratize access to AI, ensuring that institutions of all sizes—from underfunded public schools to sprawling university systems—can harness these tools to enhance learning. According to The New York Times, Microsoft’s initiative is designed to address the growing demand for digital literacy in an era where AI is becoming integral to nearly every industry.
A Vision for the Future of Learning
Details of the plan reveal a focus on practical implementation, with resources tailored to support curriculum development, teacher training, and student engagement through AI-driven platforms like Microsoft’s Copilot chatbot. The company envisions personalized learning experiences where AI can adapt to individual student needs, offering real-time feedback and tailored educational content.
Beyond software, Microsoft is committing to infrastructure support, providing computing services that many educational institutions lack the budget to acquire independently. This move could bridge significant gaps in access to technology, particularly for community colleges and technical schools that serve diverse, often underserved populations, as highlighted by The New York Times.
Collaboration and Scale of Impact
Microsoft’s announcement comes at a time when the integration of AI in education is both a promise and a challenge, with concerns about ethics, data privacy, and over-reliance on technology looming large. Yet, the company appears poised to address these issues through partnerships with educational bodies and nonprofits, ensuring that the rollout of these tools is accompanied by robust guidelines and support systems.
The initiative also aligns with broader industry trends, as tech giants increasingly invest in education to cultivate future talent and expand their influence. With over $13 billion already invested in OpenAI, Microsoft’s additional $4 billion for education signals a long-term bet on AI as a transformative force, not just in tech but in society at large, per reporting from The New York Times.
Challenges and Opportunities Ahead
While the potential benefits are immense, industry insiders note that the success of this initiative will hinge on execution—ensuring that teachers are adequately trained and that AI tools do not exacerbate existing inequalities in education. There is also the question of balancing innovation with oversight, as unchecked AI use in classrooms could raise ethical dilemmas.
Nevertheless, Microsoft’s bold step could set a precedent for how technology companies engage with public goods like education. As the world watches this $4 billion experiment unfold, the outcomes could redefine how we teach, learn, and prepare for a future dominated by artificial intelligence, with insights drawn from The New York Times underscoring the scale of this transformative endeavor.
Education
England updates Keeping Children Safe in Education to include AI, cybersecurity, and digital misinformation — EdTech Innovation Hub
The Department for Education (DfE) has published the 2025 edition of Keeping Children Safe in Education (KCSIE), its statutory safeguarding guidance for all schools and colleges in England. The revised guidance, currently issued as a draft for information, is due to come into effect on September 1, 2025.
The update introduces several new references and expectations related to digital safeguarding, reflecting evolving risks around artificial intelligence, cyber-security, and online misinformation. These changes appear in Part Two of the document and are directed primarily at governing bodies, proprietors, and designated safeguarding leads.
Misinformation and conspiracy theories formally classified as online harms
Paragraph 135 of the 2025 guidance expands the DfE’s definition of harmful online content to include misinformation, disinformation, and conspiracy theories. These are now listed alongside existing risks such as pornography, racism, radicalization, self-harm, extremism, and online grooming.
The section emphasizes that technology is a significant component in many safeguarding and wellbeing issues and that children may be exposed to multiple risks simultaneously, both online and offline. The explicit addition of misleading and conspiratorial content signals a growing concern about its impact on children’s development, decision-making, and exposure to extremist ideas.
New guidance on AI use in education
Paragraph 143 introduces a direct link to the DfE’s product safety expectations for generative artificial intelligence in schools. While the KCSIE document itself does not prescribe how AI should be used, it highlights the need for appropriate filtering and monitoring systems when AI tools are accessible to students.
This addition aligns with broader departmental efforts to balance innovation in digital learning with safeguarding and data protection obligations.
Self-assessment tools for filtering and monitoring
In paragraph 142, the DfE recommends that schools and colleges use the ‘Plan Technology for Your School’ tool, an online resource that allows institutions to self-assess their filtering and monitoring infrastructure. The tool supports compliance with the DfE’s filtering and monitoring standards, which require schools to:
-
Identify and assign roles for managing digital safety systems
-
Review provisions annually
-
Block harmful content without disrupting teaching and learning
-
Implement effective monitoring strategies appropriate to their safeguarding needs
Cybersecurity standards added to support digital resilience
Paragraph 144 refers to the DfE’s cybersecurity standards for schools and colleges, which were developed in collaboration with the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC). These standards outline the technical and procedural steps education providers should take to protect systems, data, and users from cyberattacks.
Recommended actions include regular backups, access control policies, secure configuration of devices and software, and procedures for responding to data breaches. The DfE urges institutions to periodically review their systems to ensure they remain resilient to emerging cyber threats.
Annual online safety review recommended
While not new, paragraph 145 reiterates the expectation that schools and colleges conduct an annual review of their online safety provision. This includes carrying out a risk assessment that reflects the specific threats facing their student population, especially those who are considered more vulnerable.
The guidance also points to free self-review tools such as 360safe and the LGfL online safety audit.
Additional changes unrelated to technology
While the 2025 update is primarily technical, it also includes broader safeguarding revisions such as:
-
Support for kinship care added to the role of Virtual School Heads (para 199)
-
Statutory status for attendance guidance (para 177)
-
Revised terminology aligned with the SEND Code of Practice (para 205)
-
Signposting to new RSHE and gender-questioning children guidance (paras 128, 204)
-
New resources such as Shore Space from the Lucy Faithfull Foundation (para 545) and safeguarding materials from the CSA Centre and The Children’s Society (Annex B)
Education
Threats to local school officials have nearly tripled, research finds : NPR
When the school board in Florida’s Broward County defied Gov. Ron DeSantis’ ban on school mask mandates during the pandemic, some parents sent vitriolic emails and made veiled threats.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
hide caption
toggle caption
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
When Sarah Leonardi filed to run for Florida’s Broward County School Board in 2019, she had no idea what she was getting into.
Leonardi won and took office in late 2020 in the middle of the pandemic. It was tumultuous. Gov. Ron DeSantis threatened to withhold school funding after the board defied his masking ban. Angry over mask mandates, some parents sent vitriolic emails and made veiled threats.
But as COVID rates began to ebb, new flashpoints emerged. In the fall of 2021, Leonardi chaperoned an elementary school field trip to a local bar and grill that happened to be gay-owned. Some conservative media ran with the story. New threats poured in.
“Some of them were like ‘You can’t outrun my Glock 9mm gun’ [and] ‘Take a dirt nap,’ ” Leonardi recalled in an interview with NPR. “One was like, ‘Sell that b**** as a sex slave to ISIS,’ which was oddly specific.”
Leonardi says she still receives threats when conservative media occasionally republishes the school field trip story.
“I’ll get an email or a phone call about it, just telling me what a horrific person I am,” she says.
Harassment and threats up 170%
Leonardi’s experience captures how threats against local school officials across the U.S. have shifted and grown, according to researchers at Princeton University. They conducted what they say is the largest and most comprehensive study of its kind in the country. Princeton’s Bridging Divides Initiative interviewed Leonardi along with 38 other school board officials. They also surveyed more than 820 school board officials with a group called CivicPulse. Using open-source material, investigators documented threats and harassment against school officials from November 2022 through April 2023, and the same period two years later. They found such incidents rose by 170%.
Bridging Divides says some of the local cases corresponded with national attacks on diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives as well as on LGBTQ+ policies. Roudabeh Kishi, the project’s chief research officer, says the targets held a variety of political views.
“This isn’t really like a partisan issue,” she says. “We’re seeing really similar reports of experiences (on) all sides of the political spectrum.”
In addition to Leonardi, NPR interviewed six other current or former school board officials who said they had been targets of harassment or threats. They said the anger and distrust that developed during the pandemic helped fuel and shape future disputes over cultural issues.
“The pandemic started this conversation about what are individual freedoms,” says Alexandria Ayala, a former school board member in Florida’s Palm Beach County. “What can a government tell me to do or not do?”
A second “Civil War” in Gettysburg
Al Moyer, who’s now in his ninth year on the Gettysburg Area School Board in Pennsylvania, says battles over masking frayed relationships in the district. Then, in 2023, some people in the community became uncomfortable with a tennis coach who was transitioning to female and had used the girls locker room.
Moyer said one resident called a Republican board member who opposed renewing the coach’s contract a “Nazi” to her face. He says his wife lost friends over the controversy.
“Those two situations really caused a kind of second Civil War battle in Gettysburg,” Moyer says. “It was pretty ugly.”
School board members have to navigate fights over genuine issues, but increasingly they have to grapple with fake ones as well. Russell Devorsky, who recently retired after 14 years on a school board in suburban Waco, Texas, says false stories on social media sow confusion and fuel harassment. “I am consistently and constantly harangued with individuals saying, ‘Well, kids are dressing up like cats, and they have litter boxes in bathrooms,’ ” says Devorsky. “Even though there’s never been a school district that had that situation, people believe it.”
“Like pushing a wet rope up a hill”
Even ordinary issues — such as the construction of a new band hall — can be targets of misinformation, Devorksy says. He says there were false claims on social media that the hall wouldn’t be ready on time and that students wouldn’t have instruments. Trying to set people straight who consider comments on Facebook community pages authoritative is exhausting, Devorsky says. “It’s kind of like pushing a wet rope up a hill,” he says.
The Princeton researchers worry that harassment could drive some school board members to leave public service — which they are monitoring — or avoid engaging on controversial topics. But Sarah Leonardi, the one who took the students to the gay-owned restaurant, says she isn’t quitting because she feels like she’s still making a difference.
“Ultimately, I decided to move forward and run again,” Leonardi says. “That is just a sacrifice — or a vulnerability — I’m willing to accept for now.”
Education
Pasco County, Fla., Schools to Personalize Education With AI
(TNS) — When Lacoochee Elementary School resumes classes in August, principal Latoya Jordan wants teachers to focus more attention on each student’s individual academic needs.
She’s looking at artificial intelligence as a tool they can use to personalize lessons.
“I’m interested to see how it can help,” Jordan said.
Lacoochee is exploring whether to become part of the Pasco County school district’s new AI initiative being offered to 30 campuses in the fall. It’s a test run that two groups — Scholar Educationand Khanmigo — have offered the district free of charge to see whether the schools find a longer-term fit for their classes.
Scholar, a state-funded startup that made its debut last year at Pepin Academy and Dayspring Academy, will go into selected elementary schools. Khanmigo, a national model recently highlighted on 60 Minutes, is set for use in some middle and high schools.
“Schools ultimately will decide how they want to use it,” said Monica Ilse, deputy superintendent for academics. “I want to get feedback from teachers and leaders for the future.”
Ilse said she expected the programs might free teachers from some of the more mundane aspects of their jobs, so they can pay closer attention to their students. A recent Gallup poll found teachers who regularly use AI said it saves them about six hours of work weekly, in areas such as writing quizzes and completing paperwork.
Marlee Strawn, cofounder of Scholar Education, introduced her system to the principals of 19 schools during a June 30 video call. The model is tied to Florida’s academic standards, Strawn said, and includes dozens of lessons that teachers can use.
It also allows teachers to craft their own assignments, tapping into the growing body of material being uploaded. The more specific the request, the more fine-tuned the exercises can be. If a student has a strong interest in baseball or ballet, for instance, the AI programming can help develop standards-based tasks on those subjects, she explained.
Perhaps most useful, Strawn told the principals, is the system’s ability to support teachers as they analyze student performance data. It identifies such things as the types of questions students asked and the items they struggled with, and can make suggestions about how to respond.
“The data analytics has been the most helpful for our teachers so far,” she said.
She stressed that Scholar Education protects student data privacy, a common concern among parents and educators, noting the system got a top rating from Common Sense.
School board member Jessica Wright brought up criticisms that AI has proven notoriously error-prone in math.
Strawn said the system has proven helpful when teachers seek to provide real-life examples for math concepts. She did not delve into details about the reliability of AI in calculations and formulas.
Lacoochee principal Jordan wanted to know how well the AI system would interface with other technologies, such as iReady, that schools already use.
“If it works with some of our current systems, that’s an easier way to ease into it, so for teachers it doesn’t become one more thing that you have to do,” Jordan said.
Strawn said the automated bot is a supplement that teachers can integrate with data from other tools to help them identify classroom needs and create the types of differentiated instruction that Jordan and others are looking for.
The middle and high school model, Khanmigo, will focus more on student tutoring, Ilse wrote in an email to principals. It’s designed to “guide students to a deeper understanding of the content and skills mastery,” she explained in the email. As with Scholar, teachers can monitor students’ interactions and step in with one-on-one support as needed, in addition to developing lesson plans and standards-aligned quizzes.
Superintendent John Legg said teachers and schools would not be required to use AI. Legg said he simply wanted to provide options that might help teachers in their jobs. After a year, the district will evaluate whether to continue, most likely with paid services.
While an administrator at Dayspring Academy before his election, Legg wrote a letter of support for Scholar Education’s bid for a $1 million state startup grant, and he also received campaign contributions from some of the group’s leaders. He said he had no personal stake in the organization and was backing a project that might improve education, just as he previously supported Algebra Nation, the University of Florida’s online math tutoring program launched in 2013.
©2025 Tampa Bay Times. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
-
Funding & Business1 week ago
Kayak and Expedia race to build AI travel agents that turn social posts into itineraries
-
Jobs & Careers1 week ago
Mumbai-based Perplexity Alternative Has 60k+ Users Without Funding
-
Mergers & Acquisitions1 week ago
Donald Trump suggests US government review subsidies to Elon Musk’s companies
-
Funding & Business1 week ago
Rethinking Venture Capital’s Talent Pipeline
-
Jobs & Careers1 week ago
Why Agentic AI Isn’t Pure Hype (And What Skeptics Aren’t Seeing Yet)
-
Education3 days ago
9 AI Ethics Scenarios (and What School Librarians Would Do)
-
Education4 days ago
Teachers see online learning as critical for workforce readiness in 2025
-
Education1 week ago
AERDF highlights the latest PreK-12 discoveries and inventions
-
Education4 days ago
Nursery teachers to get £4,500 to work in disadvantaged areas
-
Education6 days ago
How ChatGPT is breaking higher education, explained