President Trump issued a proclamation Monday to make teaching computer coding a priority in US schools and set aside $200 million a year for the new initiative.

Trump’s eldest daughter, Ivanka, worked on the program with the Department of Education.

“It’s easy with computer science and technology to relegate it to simply the tech field,” Ivanka Trump told reporters Monday in a press call previewing the initiative. “But the reality of the modern workforce is that technology is innovating and disrupting every industry. It is viewed by this administration as a foundational skill to understand computer science.”

The administrative action would set aside money already appropriated to the Department of Education and devote at least $200 million annually for grants to schools to ensure access to coding programs starting in fiscal 2018.

The Department of Education will prioritize programs that can reach young girls and minority students who are often underrepresented in STEM fields.

“The programs need to be designed with diversity in mind,” one senior Administration official said.

The presidential proclamation is designed to build on Trump’s earlier executive order to encourage apprenticeships. A list of private companies who will join with the Trump Administration on building computer education programs will be released Tuesday when Ivanka travels to Detroit for a technology event.