Ohio Becomes First State to Require AI Policies in Every Public School
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If you’ve been watching your child use AI tools like ChatGPT for homework and wondering what guardrails exist at school, you’re asking exactly the right question. That instinct to want clear boundaries around these powerful technologies—especially when they’re shaping how your child learns and thinks—reflects what parents across the country are grappling with. Ohio just took a significant step to address this uncertainty.
TL;DR
Ohio's House Bill 96 makes it the first state to mandate AI policies in all public schools, with a July 1, 2026 deadline.
The Ohio Department of Education and Workforce released a model policy covering student and staff AI use, curriculum integration, and academic integrity.
Districts can adopt the model policy or create their own, allowing flexibility for local priorities.
The policy was developed with input from educators, businesses, nonprofits, and technology leaders from major Ohio companies.
Other states will likely watch Ohio's implementation as they develop their own AI education guidelines.
New Law Sets July 2026 Deadline
Under House Bill 96, Ohio has become the first state to mandate that every public school district, community school, and STEM school adopt a formal artificial intelligence policy. The deadline: July 1, 2026. The Ohio Department of Education and Workforce released a model policy in December 2025, giving districts several months to review and adopt it.
“While we are supportive of schools using AI to strengthen instruction and expand learning opportunities, it is also incredibly important that these tools are used responsibly, and in a way that maintains academic integrity,” said Stephen D. Dackin, director of the Ohio Department of Education and Workforce. The model policy addresses student and staff AI use for educational purposes, curriculum integration, third-party AI tool vetting, and alignment with existing academic integrity and privacy rules.
The policy development drew on input from Ohio’s AI in Education Coalition, which brought together educators, businesses, nonprofits, and government leaders. Technology leaders from companies including Nationwide, KeyBank, and Kroger contributed insights into the skills Ohio’s future graduates will need. The state also released an AI Toolkit in early 2024 that includes introductory materials, tool examples, ethics contexts, classroom activities, and a 10-week project-based course.
For parents navigating AI’s role in their child’s education, having clear policies provides needed structure. When schools establish guidelines for how AI tools can be used in learning—and when they shouldn’t—families can better support appropriate use at home. Parents who want to understand their child’s unique learning profile can use tools like a learning difficulties analysis to identify how their child processes information and where AI might help or hinder their development.
Author Quote"
While we are supportive of schools using AI to strengthen instruction and expand learning opportunities, it is also incredibly important that these tools are used responsibly, and in a way that maintains academic integrity – Stephen D. Dackin, Director, Ohio Department of Education and Workforce
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Districts Can Customize Their Approach
Schools have flexibility in implementation. Districts can adopt the state model policy directly or create their own local version that meets the law’s requirements. This allows schools to tailor AI guidelines to their community’s values and educational priorities while maintaining a consistent baseline across Ohio’s education system.
The law also authorizes the Department of Education and Workforce to gather data from districts about their AI usage, helping the state understand how these tools are being integrated into classrooms. Ohio’s Chris Woolard, the department’s Chief Integration Officer, presented the state’s AI implementation efforts at a White House Artificial Intelligence Education Task Force meeting in December 2025. For parents wondering why some bright children struggle academically, understanding how AI tools might support or interfere with developing foundational cognitive skills becomes increasingly important.
Key Takeaways:
1
First state mandate: Ohio becomes the first state requiring all public schools to adopt formal artificial intelligence policies by July 1, 2026.
2
Model policy released: The Ohio Department of Education and Workforce provides a ready-made framework covering student use, curriculum integration, and academic integrity.
3
Parent engagement opportunity: Districts have flexibility to customize policies, giving families a chance to engage with school boards about local AI guidelines.
What This Means for Ohio Families
Ohio’s move signals that AI in education is no longer a distant future concern—it’s a present reality requiring thoughtful governance. Other states will likely watch Ohio’s implementation closely as they consider their own policies. Parents can expect their local districts to communicate about AI policy adoption in the coming months.
The deadline gives families time to engage with their school boards about local priorities. What curriculum integration looks like, which third-party AI tools get approved, and how academic integrity is maintained with AI—these decisions will shape the learning environment for years to come. Parents who understand their child’s cognitive development can better advocate for appropriate AI use that builds skills rather than bypasses them.
Every child’s brain is designed to learn, adapt, and grow—what varies is how they process information and what support they need along the way. As AI tools become embedded in classrooms, parents have a unique opportunity to advocate for guidelines that strengthen their child’s cognitive development rather than bypass it. The last thing any family needs is technology that does the thinking for a developing brain that thrives on appropriate challenge. If you’re ready to understand exactly how your child learns and what they need to succeed, the Learning Success All Access Program offers a free trial that includes a personalized Action Plan—and you keep that plan even if you decide it’s not the right fit.
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