AWS Education Equity Initiative: Applying generative AI to educate the next wave of innovators

Building on the work that we and our partners have been doing for many years, Amazon is committing up to $100 million in cloud technology and technical resources to help existing, dedicated learning organizations reach more learners by creating new and innovative digital learning solutions, all as part of the AWS Education Equity Initiative.

The Work So Far
AWS and Amazon have a long-standing commitment to learning and education. Here’s a sampling of what we have already done:

AWS AI & ML Scholarship Program – This program has awarded $28 million in scholarships to approximately 6000 students.

Machine Learning University – MLU offers a free program helping community colleges and Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) teach data management, artificial intelligence, and machine learning concepts. The program is designed to address opportunity gaps by supporting students who are historically underserved and underrepresented in technology disciplines.

Amazon Future Engineer – Since 2021, up to $46 million in scholarships has been awarded to 1150 students through this program. In the past year, more than 2.1 million students received over 17 million hours of STEM education, literacy, and career exploration courses through this and other Amazon philanthropic education programs in the United States. I was able to speak to one such session last year and it was an amazing experience:

Free Cloud Training – In late 2020 we set a goal of helping 29 million people grow their tech skills with free cloud computing training by 2025. We worked hard and met that target a year ahead of time!

There’s More To Do
Despite all of this work and progress, there’s still more to be done. The future is definitely not evenly distributed: over half a billion students cannot be reached by digital learning today.

We believe that Generative AI can amplify the good work that socially-minded edtech organizations, non-profits, and governments are already doing. Our goal is to empower them to build new and innovative digital learning systems that can amplify their work and allow them to reach a bigger audience.

With the launch of the AWS Education Equity Initiative, we want to help pave the way for the next generation of technology pioneers as they build powerful tools, train foundation models at scale, and create AI-powered teaching assistants.

We are committing up to $100 million in cloud technology and comprehensive technical advising over the next five years. The awardees will have access to the portfolio of AWS services and technical expertise so that they can build and scale learning management systems, mobile apps, chatbots, and other digital learning tools. As part of the application process, applicants will be asked to demonstrate how their proposed solution will benefit students from underserved and underrepresented communities.

As I mentioned earlier, our partners are already doing a lot of great work in this area. For example:

Code.org has already used AWS to scale their free computer science curriculum to millions of students in more than 100 countries. With this initiative, they will expand their use of Amazon Bedrock to provide an automated assessment of student projects, freeing up educator time that can be use for individual instruction and tailored learning.

Rocket Learning focuses on early childhood education in India. They will use Amazon Q in QuickSight to enhance learning outcomes for more than three million children.

I’m super excited about this initiative and look forward to seeing how it will help to create and educate the next generation of technology pioneers!

Jeff;


Blog Article: Here

  • Related Posts

    OpenAI’s latest o1 model now available in GitHub Copilot and GitHub Models

    The December 17 release of OpenAI’s o1 model is now available in GitHub Copilot and GitHub Models, bringing advanced coding capabilities to your workflows.

    The post OpenAI’s latest o1 model now available in GitHub Copilot and GitHub Models appeared first on The GitHub Blog.

    Inside the research: How GitHub Copilot impacts the nature of work for open source maintainers

    An interview with economic researchers analyzing the causal effect of GitHub Copilot on how open source maintainers work.

    The post Inside the research: How GitHub Copilot impacts the nature of work for open source maintainers appeared first on The GitHub Blog.

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Announcing CodeQL Community Packs

    60 of our biggest AI announcements in 2024

    60 of our biggest AI announcements in 2024

    Our remedies proposal in DOJ’s search distribution case

    Our remedies proposal in DOJ’s search distribution case

    How Chrome’s Autofill can drive more conversions at checkout

    How Chrome’s Autofill can drive more conversions at checkout

    The latest AI news we announced in December

    The latest AI news we announced in December

    OpenAI’s latest o1 model now available in GitHub Copilot and GitHub Models

    OpenAI’s latest o1 model now available in GitHub Copilot and GitHub Models