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BU, nonprofit team up to build AI Ethics Index for schools

Steph Solis

AXIOS

Jun 1, 2026

Boston University and a Boston-based nonprofit are setting out to build an AI Ethics Index for K-12 schools.

Why it matters: The move-fast-and-break-things mentality that drives tech leaders is exposing children to AI tools that may have unintended consequences.

  • Only in recent years have researchers produced long-term studies suggesting a link between longer screen time and slower brain development in children.

Between the lines: There's no independent safety standard governing the use of AI tools by children.

  • Just Horizons Alliance, a nonprofit founded by BU professor Wesley Wildman and led by him and Janet Kang, a former corporate venture partner, wants to create it.

Driving the news: BU announced a partnership between its Wheelock College of Education & Human Development and Just Horizons Alliance, in collaboration with BU's Center for Computing & Data Sciences.

  • Wheelock dean Penny Bishop and Kang, Just Horizons Alliance's executive director, signed a three-year agreement Friday as part of Boston Tech Week to build the index.

Zoom in: A team of computer scientists, data engineers and social scientists will build a system that analyzes AI-driven tools being marketed to children and K-12 schools, measuring their effect on mental health, compliance with education privacy laws, and other metrics.

  • From there, they plan to build a database that compiles the list of products and their scores on the index.

What they're saying: "We look at the code. We also look at the psychological and social impact on the ground," Kang told dozens in BU's "jenga" building Friday.

  • Kang repeatedly said she believes in the promise of AI and its ability to improve student learning.
  • The problem, she said, is that "teachers are being asked to use AI purely based on vendor promises, marketing materials and demos — not independent evidence."

What we're watching: The team plans to develop the index for K-12 schools, but Kang and others said they could someday apply the tool to other industries.