Now accepting founding schools for 2026–2027 →

Still In Charge

AI safety for students. Teaching responsible use without surrendering judgment, privacy, or accountability.

Still In Charge is a student AI safety initiative from Fellowship Intelligence. It gives schools, families, and community partners a simple way to help students use AI responsibly while protecting judgment, privacy, verification, and accountability.

A Fellowship Intelligence Student AI Governance Initiative
Still In Charge emblem: a tree with circuit-board roots and a student reading beneath it
Founding Schools · 2026–2027

Be one of the first schools to bring Still In Charge to your students.

We're forming a small founding cohort of schools and districts for the 2026–2027 school year. Founding schools help shape the program as it establishes its standard, and receive the full program plus direct access to the founder.

The full program, free

Student and parent guides to distribute, plus the founder's virtual time: a district program meeting, a teacher Q&A, and a parent Q&A.

Shape the standard

Founding schools give direct feedback that informs how the program evolves. Your questions and context influence the guidance itself.

Founding recognition

Recognized as a founding school of the initiative, an early, visible commitment to responsible student AI use.

Now forming the founding cohort for the 2026–2027 school year. Spots are limited, reach out to start the conversation.
The Core Problem

The real risk is judgment displacement.

The Deeper Concern

Most conversations about AI in schools focus on cheating, bans, detection, or productivity. Those issues matter, but they miss the deeper concern. Students are entering a world where AI can produce answers, drafts, summaries, explanations, and recommendations instantly.

If students rely on AI to think for them, they do not just risk mistakes. They risk weakening the judgment, curiosity, originality, and accountability they will need for school, work, and life.

This is why Still In Charge focuses on student agency, not fear of technology.

AI should help students think better. It should not replace their thinking.

Cheating is only one risk.

Academic integrity violations are visible and addressable. The erosion of thinking is not.

Privacy exposure is only one risk.

Students may share sensitive personal, family, or school information without recognizing the consequence.

Wrong answers are only one risk.

AI can produce confident, plausible, and entirely incorrect information that students accept without verification.

The larger risk is dependency.

Students who outsource judgment to AI systems lose the skills that make them valuable as thinkers, collaborators, and future professionals.

The Five Principles

A simple standard for responsible student AI use.

Five practical principles students can understand and apply immediately, in school, at home, in internships, and in any environment where AI tools are present.

Underneath all five, one idea: you are responsible for what you produce. The machine does not sign your name. You do.

  1. 01

    Think Better

    Use AI to sharpen reasoning and ideas, not to replace effort or judgment. Students remain responsible for the thinking behind the work.

  2. 02

    Protect Privacy

    Never enter personal, confidential, financial, company, client, or restricted information into AI tools. Once sensitive information is entered, students may not control where it goes.

  3. 03

    Verify Outputs

    Students must check facts, sources, and claims before using, presenting, submitting, or acting on AI-generated output.

  4. 04

    Follow Rules

    School, classroom, workplace, and organizational rules come first. AI does not override the standards set by teachers, employers, or institutions. When rules are unclear, students should ask before using AI.

  5. 05

    Pause and Ask

    When something feels wrong, risky, inappropriate, or uncertain, students should stop and ask a teacher, supervisor, or responsible adult before proceeding.

For Schools

Simple to bring in. Real support included.

Still In Charge is a low-friction student reference, not a heavy curriculum rollout. There is no software to install and no platform to manage. Your school gets ready-to-share materials plus live time with the founder, and it works alongside your existing AI policy or as a starting point where formal guidance is still developing.

Materials your school hands out

Student Guide

A clear, printable reference to the five principles for classrooms, advisory periods, and clubs. Preview the student guide →

Parent Guide

A plain-language guide that helps families continue the conversation at home, with questions and household guidelines. Preview the parent guide →

Live time with the founder, about 3–4 hours, all virtual

District Program Meeting

A working session with district or school administration to introduce the program and align it with your policies.

Teacher Q&A

A one-hour virtual Q&A for educators on responsible AI use, the five principles, and classroom questions.

Parent Q&A

A one-hour virtual Q&A for families on what students are learning and how to reinforce it at home.

ⓘ  Still In Charge is designed to support responsible AI use. It does not promote, endorse, or recommend any specific AI product or platform.
How It Works

A simple operating model for schools, sponsors, and advisors.

Easy to share, easy to sponsor, and easy to govern. Schools receive practical student-facing guidance. Sponsors support access and distribution. Fellowship Intelligence maintains the program standard. Advisors help preserve seriousness, independence, and relevance.

Schools share the student guide

Schools can distribute the free student reference page to students, families, teachers, clubs, advisory programs, and career-readiness groups.

Sponsors fund access and materials

Companies and community partners may fund school distribution, printable materials, parent explainers, educator prompts, and local awareness efforts.

Fellowship Intelligence maintains the standard

Program content, sponsor boundaries, and governance standards remain controlled by Fellowship Intelligence.

Advisors preserve credibility

AI governance advisors review the principles and help keep the initiative serious, practical, independent, and resistant to hype or sponsor influence.

For Corporate Sponsors

Support responsible AI for students, without touching the content.

Sponsors are recognized as organizations that publicly support responsible student AI use. It is positioning, not influence: no editorial input, no student data, and no sponsor presence in anything students receive. Fellowship Intelligence is a Nevada LLC, not a nonprofit, so sponsorship is not tax-deductible.

Program Integrity

Independent standards. Clear boundaries.

The program is not a vehicle for product placement, student data collection, recruiting access, or sponsor-controlled messaging. These boundaries are structural, by design.

What sponsors can do

  • Fund school access and local distribution
  • Receive appropriate recognition for community support
  • Participate in community impact storytelling
  • Help expand student access across schools and districts
  • Align publicly with responsible AI citizenship values
  • Fund parent and educator materials

Why it is safe to put your name on it

Built to protect your name, as well as ours. Because sponsors do not shape the content, your support carries no risk of looking like you are marketing to children or steering what they are taught. You get the credit for backing responsible AI education with none of the exposure. The independence is the program's value, and yours.

No student data collection. No product placement. No sponsor control of content.
Where This Is Headed

Teaching students is the start. Setting the standard is the goal.

Students are already using AI, mostly alone, at home, on consumer tools built for adults, with no one to ask when something feels wrong. Teaching judgment matters, but judgment is built by practice: supervised, hands-on, with an adult within reach.

The bigger idea

Beyond the guides, Still In Charge is working to define what safe, free, school-supervised access to AI should look like, so schools can require it, and any provider can choose to meet it. Not a product we operate. Not an endorsement of any vendor. A standard, held to the same discipline as everything else we do.

The direction, in plain terms: access that is free and unbranded, school-operated and privacy-protective, supervised by design, and built to strengthen judgment rather than replace it.

We operate nothing, broker nothing, and take nothing from providers. The goal is a clear standard schools can trust, not another platform to manage.

Advisor Council

Guided by serious AI governance thinking.

Still In Charge is supported by AI governance advisors who help maintain the program's seriousness, relevance, and practical value. Advisors do not manage day-to-day operations. They strengthen the standard, preserve independence, and keep the guidance trustworthy. Fellowship Intelligence retains control of program standards, sponsor boundaries, and final content decisions.

Review Program Principles

Advisors periodically evaluate the five principles for continued relevance, accuracy, and institutional appropriateness as the AI environment evolves.

Support Responsible Positioning

Advisors help ensure the program communicates credibly and responsibly, avoiding hype, misrepresentation, and vendor-aligned framing.

Support School Introductions

Advisors support introductions with school systems, district leaders, community organizations, and governance bodies considering the program.

Maintain Governance Discipline

Advisors reinforce the program's governance standards, including independence from sponsor influence and clarity of student-facing language.

Protect Against Hype and Drift

As AI discourse evolves rapidly, advisors help the program stay grounded, practical, and resistant to both alarmism and uncritical enthusiasm.

Discuss an Advisor Role

Serious voices in AI governance, education, and child development interested in the standard are welcome to start a conversation.

Schedule a call

Get Involved

Three ways to participate.

Schools

Use Still In Charge as a student reference and share it with students, families, and educators. It can work alongside existing AI policy, classroom rules, or as a starting point where formal guidance is still developing.

Bring This to a School

Sponsors

Fund distribution for schools, districts, or communities as part of a responsible AI citizenship initiative. Sponsorship supports access, not content. Your organization is recognized for supporting student safety and responsible AI readiness.

Sponsor Distribution

Advisors

Support the initiative through governance review, credibility, and community introductions. Advisors lend their expertise to strengthen the standard and help schools and partners understand why responsible student AI use matters now.

Discuss Advisor Role

About the Parent Organization

About Fellowship Intelligence

AI Governance and Control-Layer Advisory

Fellowship Intelligence is an AI governance and control-layer advisory firm. We help organizations create practical systems for responsible AI use, including policy, controls, ownership, escalation, monitoring, and governance continuity. Our work is grounded in the belief that responsible AI use requires clear standards, disciplined boundaries, and human accountability at every level.

Still In Charge as Governance in Practice

Still In Charge applies that same governance discipline to student AI safety in a format schools can actually use. It is not a technology product, a curriculum marketplace, or an automation service. It is a practical governance initiative designed for the institutional context of schools, families, and community partners.

From the Founder

Why I built Still In Charge.

I spent two years as a para-educator working with high school students the system had mostly given up on. I watched what happens when the tools get ahead of the judgment, and I built Still In Charge so students grow up using AI without handing over their own thinking.

I'm Thomas Tornatore, founder of Fellowship Intelligence, an AI governance and control-layer advisory firm. Still In Charge applies that same governance discipline to student AI safety, in a form schools can actually use.

“You are responsible for what you produce. The machine does not sign your name. You do.”

Thomas Tornatore
Founder, Still In Charge · Fellowship Intelligence LLC

Read the founder's essays →

Common Questions

What schools and sponsors ask.

What does it cost?
Still In Charge is free to schools and families. Sponsors and community partners may fund distribution and local outreach, but no school or family ever pays to use the program.
What data do you collect from students?
None. There are no student accounts and no student data of any kind. Every resource is public and works without a sign-up. See our privacy policy and student data privacy disclosure for the full detail.
What does my school actually receive?
The student guide and the parent guide to distribute, plus about three to four hours of the founder's time, all virtual: a program meeting with district or school administration, a one-hour teacher Q&A, and a one-hour parent Q&A.
How much work is it for us?
Very little. There is no software to install, no platform to manage, and no required training sequence. You share the guides and schedule the virtual sessions. It fits alongside your existing AI policy.
Do you tell students which AI tools to use?
No. The program is tool-agnostic. It does not promote, endorse, or recommend any AI product or platform. It teaches judgment, privacy, verification, accountability, and knowing when to stop.
Who controls the content?
Fellowship Intelligence controls all program standards and materials. Sponsors fund access but never shape, edit, or appear inside the student-facing content.
Is it appropriate for our age range?
Yes. It is designed for middle school through college. The five principles scale across ages, and the parent guide helps families reinforce them at home.
How do we bring it to our school?

Help students use AI without losing their judgment.

AI will shape how students learn, work, and make decisions, not as a distant future scenario, but as a present reality already inside classrooms, homework sessions, and career preparation. The question is not whether students will use AI. The question is whether they remain in charge of their own thinking when they do.

Still In Charge gives schools, sponsors, and community partners a practical way to act now. It helps students grow up with AI while preserving the judgment, accountability, and independent thinking they will need to lead.