Europe and the OECD launched a 19-competence AI literacy blueprint for every K-12 student. Before your child’s school rolls it out, there is a more urgent question to answer.

Common questions

Does it matter if this framework is from Europe? My child goes to school in the US.

It matters more than it appears. The AILit Framework feeds directly into the PISA 2029 Media and AI Literacy assessment — the same international test the US participates in. That means within three years, AI literacy competences will shape how US students are benchmarked against international peers. The US has historically adopted frameworks that gain PISA traction. These competences will reach American district curriculum decisions even without the EU name on the cover.

What foundational skills does AI literacy actually require?

The AILit Framework’s first domain, Engage with AI, asks learners to critically evaluate AI-generated content, identify potential bias, and assess source reliability. Those are reading comprehension and critical thinking tasks. Managing AI requires self-regulation and metacognition. Shaping AI requires sustained written argument and civic reasoning. All of these rest on working memory, processing speed, phonological awareness, and auditory processing — the same multi-system foundation the IDA 2025 definition identifies as essential for reading development.

My child struggles with reading. Should I be worried about AI tools in their classroom?

Not automatically — but pay attention to what the AI is doing. A tool that provides scaffolding while a child builds decoding skills is different from one that reads all text indefinitely. The first supports skill-building; the second replaces the expectation the skill gets built. If you want to understand your child’s processing picture, a screener gives you a starting point today. Keep in mind: a screener is not a diagnosis. If your child might need formal accommodations such as an IEP or 504 plan, or you suspect a vision, hearing, or medical cause, a professional evaluation is the route to those supports.

Is the AILit Framework saying AI should replace reading instruction?

No — the framework is explicit that AI cannot replace human judgment, care, or relationships, and it trains students specifically to recognize when not to use AI. The concern here is not about the framework’s intent but about how “AI literacy” gets implemented in schools that have not addressed foundational literacy gaps. The framework is a competence map. It does not close the NAEP reading gap. That work still has to happen first.