Only 3% of U.S. Students Attend
Tech-Ready Schools Amid AI Push
The U.S. Department of Education has given schools the green light to use federal funds to bring AI into classrooms. Yet despite this official push, a new analysis from Cybernews reveals a strong disconnect: only about 3% of American students attend schools with any formal plan for technological improvement. In other words, more than 47 million students are navigating an education system ill-prepared for the realities of the AI age.
“Closing the digital divide isn’t simply about handing out devices or switching on Wi-Fi,” said Žilvinas Girėnas, Head of Product at nexos.ai, an AI platform part of a new effort to bring advanced tools into Lithuanian schools. “It demands deeper changes – digital, including AI, literacy, equitable resources, and policy reforms – to ensure that no student is left behind in a world where technology shapes opportunity.”
Vulnerable Students Are Especially Exposed
The digital divide hits vulnerable populations the hardest. Over the past five years, Cybernews’s analysis shows a 9% rise in homeless children attending K-12 schools nationwide, from 1.2 million to 1.4 million – now roughly 3% of the total 49 million students. In New York State, the increase is stronger: homeless student enrollment jumped 30%, from about 105,000 to nearly 140,000.
“The new U.S. policy allowing federal funds for AI integration in classrooms is a crucial opportunity but only if it centers on equitable access and comprehensive training,” said Girėnas.
Data from the School Pulse Panel shows persistent disparities: 62% of schools in higher-poverty neighborhoods offer digital literacy courses, compared to 70% in lower-poverty areas. Meanwhile, just 29% of public schools have improvement plans – and only a fraction include strategies for instructional technology.
The Growing Case for AI in Education
Generative AI has already found a foothold in education worldwide. According to IDC’s study, 86% of education organizations globally report using generative AI tools. Students have exhibited a significant increase in the use of AI across various categories, such as helping to develop skills for the future or helping to learn and study in a way that is best for them. A survey by Quizlet showed that 85% of American high school and college teachers and students aged 14-22 reported using AI technology, a noticeable increase from 66% in 2024.
From lesson planning to brainstorming, assignment help to unpacking complex subjects, AI has seeped into the daily rhythms of teaching and learning. For students, particularly those facing learning challenges like dyslexia, AI offers personalized experiences: instant summaries, on-demand tutoring, and tailored support that reshapes how they engage with material.
Yet beneath this technological surge lies another reality: 36% of public schools lack the staff necessary for traditional tutoring, while only 13% provide on-demand online tutoring and 15% offer self-paced options. “These numbers could be improved by integrating AI tools into tutoring programs,” said Girėnas. “AI has the potential to expand access to individualized support, easing burdens on under-resourced schools, and helping more students connect deeply with their education.”
Protecting Sensitive Student Data Is Key
Schools collect a wide range of sensitive data, including personally identifiable information, academic performance metrics, behavioral engagement records, learning analytics, communication logs, and assistive technology data.
“With federal funding set to fuel AI adoption in schools, every new system is a potential target,” says Aras Nazarovas, a senior cybersecurity researcher at Cybernews. “Before deployment, AI tools must undergo strict security checks and ongoing security monitoring.”
The risks can be huge. A report from the Center for Internet Security found 82% of U.S. K-12 schools faced cyber incidents from mid-2023 to late 2024. In just the first half of 2025, ransomware struck 130 schools, with average ransoms exceeding half a million dollars.
Yet many schools lag in preparedness. While 67% provide AI training to staff, far fewer educate students – only 6% on technical AI use and 14% on ethics. Cyberattacks do more than disrupt schedules. UNICEF warns they deepen risks of manipulation, fraud, bias, and cyberbullying, harming students’ well-being both online and off.
“AI can be a powerful tool for learning,” Nazarovas concludes, “but only if privacy and safety lead every step of its adoption.”


