Subscribe from $5.99
0,00 USD

No products in the cart.

CoSN Unveils 2025 State Cybersecurity Legislation Report

Advertisement

CoSN recently released the 2025 State Cybersecurity Legislation Report, highlighting state-level actions to strengthen K–12 cybersecurity amid escalating threats and shrinking federal support. The report details recent legislative activity across five states and provides recommendations on governance, funding, workforce development, incident response, and data standards to help state and district leaders across the country secure the future of digital learning.

Cybersecurity threats to K–12 schools are growing in frequency, sophistication, and cost, yet many school districts remain under-resourced and underprepared. According to the CoSN 2025 State of EdTech District Leadership report, 61 percent of school districts rely on general funds rather than dedicated cybersecurity budgets to protect their networks and data.

Recent federal policy shifts, including the elimination of funding for the Multi-State Information Sharing and Analysis Center (MS-ISAC), have weakened national support for school districts. In response, states such as Arkansas, Massachusetts, Oregon, Pennsylvania, and Texas are taking action. The 2025 legislative actions reviewed in this report provide ideas for developing and adopting policies that will help school districts and their partners address these challenges. 

“While federal support for K–12 cybersecurity is in turmoil, several states are advancing innovative, bipartisan legislation to help safeguard student data, improve incident response, expand insurance access, and build the cybersecurity workforce we urgently need,” said Keith Krueger, CEO, CoSN. “These states’ common strategies offer actionable ideas for state and district leaders across the country and underscore the importance of system-wide collaboration and strategic leadership.”

Key Findings

  • Eighteen K–12 cybersecurity bills were introduced in 2025 across the five states studied.
  • Seven bills became law—all in Arkansas and Texas—focused on insurance access, training and infrastructure support, cyberattack response, data practices, and risk assessments.
  • Sixty-one K–12-focused and broader cybersecurity bills were introduced across the five states in 2025 that would directly or indirectly benefit K–12 cybersecurity, covering government systems, post-secondary institutions, or crosscutting issues such as insurance, incident response, AI accountability, and workforce development.
  • Several common policy strategies emerged across the cybersecurity legislation introduced or enacted in the tracked states:
    • Centralized cybersecurity governance and oversight
    • Cybersecurity insurance and risk management
    • Cybersecurity workforce development and education
    • Integration of cybersecurity into K–12 and higher education policy
    • Incident reporting and crisis response readiness
    • AI, privacy, and cybersecurity intersection

Policy Recommendations

  • Establish or Strengthen Statewide K–12 Cybersecurity Governance: Designate a cybersecurity lead within the state education agency and ensure that school districts are included in state-level cybersecurity planning and governance bodies.
  • Fund and Require School District Cybersecurity Risk Assessments: Allocate funding for school districts to conduct risk assessments and develop mitigation strategies.
  • Align Workforce Policy With K–12 Needs: Support teacher certification in cybersecurity and create K–12 student pathways aligned with current and emerging workforce demand.
  • Mandate Incident Reporting and Create Response Protocols: Require timely reporting of cybersecurity incidents and support districts with coordinated response plans and training exercises.
  • Update Procurement and Data Governance Standards: Require that vendors meet minimum cybersecurity standards and align procurement processes with national frameworks.

By adopting well-designed strategies—centralized oversight, insurance requirements, workforce investment, integrated planning, and responsible innovation oversight—states can help their school districts move from reactive to resilient. Cross-sector collaboration and sustained investment will be critical to protecting students, educators, and the integrity of public education systems.

For further information on CoSN’s cybersecurity initiatives, visit: cosn.org/edtech-topics/cybersecurity/.


About CoSN

CoSN, the world-class professional association for K–12 EdTech leaders, stands at the forefront of education innovation. We are driven by a mission to equip current and aspiring K–12 education technology leaders, their teams, and school districts with the community, knowledge, and professional development they need to cultivate engaging learning environments. Our vision is rooted in a future where every learner reaches their unique potential, guided by our community. CoSN represents over 13 million students and continues to grow as a powerful and influential voice in K–12 education. Learn more at cosn.org.

TEACH is the largest national education publication in Canada. We support good teachers and teaching and believe in innovation in education.

Education News

AI in Education: Expert Says Guardrails Are the Difference Between Help and Harm

Veteran EdTech leader Peter Kraft says schools need clear rules and protections to make sure AI supports teachers and student growth, not shortcuts.

$1M Grant from the Allstate Foundation Expands NASSP Youth Service and Leadership Initiatives

The partnership empowers student councils and national honor societies to make a greater impact in their communities.

“The Wounded Line”: An Accessible and Inspiring Guide to Writing Poems About Trauma

I’ve seen how many of my students want to write about their traumas in poems. And I’ve also seen how difficult this process can be for them. That’s why I decided to write “The Wounded Line.”

New Automated Early Warning System Identifies At-Risk Students Months Before They Become Chronically Absent

New features in SchoolStatus Attend platform flag risk within 60 days to help educators intervene earlier, ensuring no student slips through the cracks.

Join Our Newsletter

Join now for a chance to win 1 of 2 $25 Indigo e-gift cards this month!

TEACH Mag
TEACH Mag
TEACH is the largest national education publication in Canada. We support good teachers and teaching and believe in innovation in education.

Advertisement

Read More

10 Holiday Light Displays You Won’t Want to Miss

We’ve rounded up the best light displays to chase away those winter blues and help you get into the holiday spirit.

From Crafts to Curriculum: Why Playful Learning Isn’t Just for Kids

Play is widely acknowledged as essential to children’s learning; but does it have a role for the future teachers who are learning to guide those children as well?

AI in Education: Expert Says Guardrails Are the Difference Between Help and Harm

Veteran EdTech leader Peter Kraft says schools need clear rules and protections to make sure AI supports teachers and student growth, not shortcuts.

$1M Grant from the Allstate Foundation Expands NASSP Youth Service and Leadership Initiatives

The partnership empowers student councils and national honor societies to make a greater impact in their communities.

Scripted, Not Silenced: Finding Freedom Within the Frame

We don’t have to choose between structure and creativity. The best teaching lives in the in-between, where we follow a script, but we fill it with our stories, our students’ voices, and our classroom rhythms.

Is It Time to Redefine Education for Modern Students? An Interview with Ravi Bhushan

How do we prepare students for a world that looks nothing like the one traditional curricula were designed for? Ravi Bhushan, founder of BrightCHAMPS, believes he has part of the answer.