At the Center for AI and Everybody, we see AI as public infrastructure, not just a private innovation. Right now, AI adoption is accelerating in well-resourced spaces while under-resourced schools and community organizations are being left behind. We work directly with Title I schools, small nonprofits, and distressed communities to close that gap through research, training, and responsible implementation support. But real scale doesn’t happen alone. It requires collaboration with corporations, funders, and large institutions that care about long-term equity and want to directly support under-resourced organizations and communities.
We’re not interested in performative partnerships. We build sustained collaborations that connect technical expertise with real community realities. Our partnerships can take many forms, including funding support for free trainings, sponsorship of community AI literacy initiatives, in-kind technology contributions, joint research projects, and pro bono technical advising. We also co-design pilot programs that bring responsible AI tools directly into Title I schools and grassroots nonprofits. For funders, that might mean investing in multi-year capacity-building efforts that strengthen local institutions. For corporations, it could mean aligning talent, product development, and community engagement strategies with equity-centered implementation.
Together, we channel resources, tools, and expertise into places that have historically been overlooked. We help ensure AI tools are adopted ethically, securely, and in ways that actually expand opportunity rather than concentrate it. When organizations partner with us, they’re not just supporting a program — they’re helping build an AI ecosystem that works for everybody.