You're pledging to donate if the project hits its minimum goal and gets approved. If not, your funds will be returned.
As AI enters classrooms, the stakes are immediate—not abstract. Privacy breaches, cheating, bias, and misinformation aren’t future hypotheticals; they’re today’s ethical challenges. This project gives one Louisiana public high school classroom (New Harmony High) the infrastructure and curriculum to grapple with those realities head-on.
We’re building a student-run AI ethics lab powered by 20 offline AI workstations and a full curriculum in AI literacy and data science. Students won’t just use AI—they’ll reason with it, question it, and confront its consequences.
Key components include:
20 high-performance mini-PCs for local AI model execution
Offline writing tools like a WASM-based claim checker
Data visualization via Tableau dashboards, to teach pattern recognition and interpretation
Curriculum focused on prompt design, AI reasoning, and ethical use
How will this funding be used?
Total project cost: $12,977.60
Already raised: $6,000 (in May 2025)
$5,000 from Walter Isaacson
$1,000 from The Philosophers Group
Funds requested: $6,977.60 to close the gap and launch the lab.
Breakdown:
$9,598 — 20 MINISFORUM UM870 Mini PCs (Ryzen 7, 32GB RAM)
$1,660 — 20 × 24″ monitors
$520 — 20 backlit keyboard + mouse combos
$1,200 — Tableau Desktop I: Fundamentals (teacher training)
Every dollar will be used for student-facing hardware or direct teacher capacity-building. No admin, no overhead.
Team & Track Record
Sean Muggivan — Lead Instructor
10+ years in teaching (math, data science), with a background in community-based social work.
Designed the data science curriculum and developed the classroom’s AI tooling stack (including a local claim-checker and prompt tutor).
Blake Bertuccelli-Booth — Oversight & Evaluation
Founder of Equalify; Assistant Director of Digital Accessibility at the University of Illinois Chicago.
Will review progress quarterly and support with reporting and scale strategy.
This is his second major AI-EDU philanthropic project in Louisiana; his first funded a $13,000 grant that led to a school-wide AI playbook and an AI literacy course for all students.
Most likely failures
Limited teacher prep bandwidth: With ongoing staffing shortages, it’s hard for teachers to carve out sustained time for training and integration. While some summer prep is planned, school-year disruptions (testing, substitute coverage) could affect momentum. Mitigation: structured async materials and curriculum templates.
Student disengagement: Without careful scaffolding, some students may struggle with AI concepts and disengage. Mitigation: tools are embedded in writing, analysis, and problem-solving work—where engagement has been strongest.
Curriculum integration strain: Even promising projects risk deprioritization when facing rigid schedules and state testing. Mitigation: tie outcomes to standards and provide clear Tableau dashboards to demonstrate value to school leaders, and the school leader is firmly behind us
Bottom Line: This grant turns AI ethics into a lived, local reality. With low-cost infrastructure and real-world tools, we’re giving students the power to explore—not just AI, but what it means to live responsibly in a world that runs on it.