Fact Sheet: New Progress and Momentum in Support of President Obama’s Computer Science for All Initiative

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In his final State of the Union Address and subsequent weekly address, President Barack Obama set a bold goal—every American student should have the opportunity to learn computer science (CS). Since the President’s call to action, strong momentum for CS education has been growing at all levels of government and in the private sector. Twelve states have taken concrete policy steps to expand CS education—and there are now 31 states that allow CS to count towards high school graduation. More than 100 organizations have already pledged more than $250 million to support CS education. To mark this progress, and celebrate new commitments in support of the President’s initiative, the White House is hosting a summit on Computer Science for All. Key announcements being made include:

More than $25 million in new grants awarded from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to expand CS education
A new CSforAll Consortium of more than 180 organizations, which will connect stakeholders with curriculum and resources, as well as track progress towards the goal of Computer Science for All
New commitments from more than 200 organizations, ranging from expanded CS offerings within the Girl Scouts of the USA that could reach 1.4 million girls per year, to Code.org supporting professional development for 40,000 additional teachers, to new collaborations to bring CS to students in a variety of settings from African-American churches to family coding nights to tribal Head Start programs to students as Chief Science Officers.


Fact Sheet: New Progress and Momentum in Support of President Obama’s Computer Science for All Initiative