This Pennsylvania cyber charter proposal would replace teachers with AI-based lessons

The Texas founders of an unconventional AI-based learning model want to expand into Pennsylvania, pitching a plan for a cyber charter school that would replace teachers with software and squeeze traditional academics into 2 hours of daily instruction. Representatives of Unbound Academic Institute Charter School, which has a pending application before state officials, say their artificial intelligence technology tailors lessons to each child and helps them master material more quickly. Compressing the typical school day into 2 hours keeps students from burning out on academics and frees up time for developing a range of other life skills, they say. And instead of traditional teachers, the school uses educators called guides to coach students and monitor their progress. Read the full article here

AI System Will Drive Academics at New Virtual Charter School

Opening this fall in Arizona, Unbound Academy will use AI to condense core academic lessons to two hours a day, followed by workshops, mentorship sessions and student-led projects, per the school’s charter application. A new virtual charter school in Arizona will use artificial intelligence-based learning apps to teach core academic lessons in two hours a day. The other four hours will be dedicated to mentorship sessions, student projects and workshops on topics such as public speaking and financial literacy, according to the school’s charter application. Called Unbound Academy, the charter will serve up to 200 students in grades four through eight starting this fall, and can grow to enroll 800 students over time, according to the Arizona State Board for Charter Schools, which approved Unbound Academy’s application last month. Read the full article here

AI-focused private school expands

Alpha School, the private school that made headlines last year for its AI-powered, two-hour learning periods, is expanding in Austin. Why it matters: An increasing share of Austin kids are heading to private schools as public schools struggle to attract and keep students. Read the full article here

Alpha School: Using AI To Unleash Students And Transform Teaching

Alpha School represents a radical departure from traditional education. Their model is built around a bold claim: By leveraging AI-driven, adaptive learning technology, students can complete an entire day’s worth of academics in just two hours. The rest of the day is dedicated to life skills, passion projects, and co-curricular activities, creating a balance between independent mastery and communal engagement. This approach is designed to solve two persistent challenges in education: the inefficiency of one-size-fits-all instruction and the isolation of individualized learning. By allowing students to work individually at their own pace but within a shared environment, Alpha School preserves the social benefits of schooling while eliminating many of its traditional inefficiencies. How Alpha School Works Read the full article here

The six-hour school day is dead. Luckily, there’s an even better solution.

Welcome to 2 Hour Learning, where kids learn twice as much, twice as fast. It’s true — kids can crush academics in just two hours a day. And by “crush,” I mean, climb their way to the top 1% of the nation. This isn’t hyperbole. It’s happening right now in the halls of our flagship school, Alpha. And your kids could be next. To ease the swell of panic that probably just rose in your throat — “you mean the newest, most successful form of education includes kids coming home after just two hours of school!?” — you should know that the “two hour” model only applies to hard and fast academics. (Yes. Take a breath. All is well.) It works like this: Mornings are for academics. Kids spend two hours immersed in deep, focused learning with traditional academia: math, reading, science, history. Afternoons are for life skills. Kids spend four hours participating in workshops that simulate real-world skills: public-speaking, entrepreneurship, creative writing, financial literacy. Kids aren’t built to sit butt-in-chair for six hours a day. Intuitively, we know this. They need movement and conversation, things to build and challenges to overcome. It’s frustrating enough for adults to be tethered to their desk all day. Why subject kids to the same fate? Why not fill their afternoons with activities that inspire them, that show them how the world actually works? Say, launching a food truck business, or writing a Broadway musical, rather than nodding off during post-lunch afternoon algebra. Kids are far more capable than we give them credit for, and the six hour school day keeps them shackled in these chains of unbelief. The two-hour learning model, however, gives kids precisely what they need — legitimate academia and real-world experience — precisely how they need it — action over absorption. This isn’t a romanticized ideal, either. The results are remarkable. The data is astonishing. Two hour learning doesn’t just educate kids, it equips them to do what most adults cannot: crowdsource funding, launch AirBnbs, start businesses, code their own apps. This is the future of education. Just two hours a day leads to remarkable outcomesWe’ll start with Alpha’s results: Classes rank in the top 1% nationally across nearly every subject. Academic progress that would take years in a traditional school is compressed into mere months. We have students complete more than two grade levels in just six months. Students learn twice as much, twice as fast — literally. In traditional schools, a fifth grader who gains four points in math gains eight here. For a seventh grader in the 99th percentile at a traditional school, that jump is from seven points to 14. To be especially blunt, the halls of Alpha are not filled with nepo-baby prodigies. One of our campuses (Alpha Brownsville) lies in the heart of one of the poorest districts in America, and many of our students there come from significantly disadvantaged backgrounds. Even still, they learn at more than twice the rate of their peers in traditional schools. Socioeconomic status does not sway the success of the model. And the data doesn’t stop there. On average, our high schoolers score a 1470 on their SAT. Our hallways teem with National Merit Scholars and AP Scholars with Distinction. Alpha alumni get accepted to elite institutions like Stanford, NYU Shanghai, and Howard University — all while spending just two hours a day on academics. And kindergarteners? To be honest, we doubted this model could even work for them. But look: nearly all of our kindergartners rank in the top 1% for both knowledge and learning speed after just one year. I bet you had no idea this level of success was even possible. (Once upon a time, I didn’t either.) Or, maybe you assumed this scale of success was set aside for the little Einsteins, the once-in-a-generation geniuses, the kids who slide straight out of the womb reciting the digits of Pi. But that’s not even close to being true. Believe it or not, Alpha students aren’t born little geniuses. These are average kids (if we can call any kid “average”) who are simply put in the position to thrive. And that is the two hour learning model. So, what makes it tick? Why does it work so well? The secret is, and always will be, personalized educationThe genius of the two-hour model can be summed up into seven syllables: individualization. We’re used to education molding kids into little standardized clay pots, and this works fine for the few but leaves most kids floundering. The two-hour model follows a different philosophy, one that prioritizes the personal needs of each kid. There are two keys to success here: individualized AI tutoring and mastery-based learning. Individualized AI tutoring supercharges kids’ learningIf you’re flinching at the idea of “an AI tutor,” just know: this isn’t some Silicon Valley fever dream where we hand kids a tablet and say, “Let us know when you’ve finished high school.” Nor is it a dystopian fantasy where kids only want to hang out with their Siri. In the right environment, with the right supervision, AI supercharges kids’ learning. A few years ago, an eighth grade girl enrolled in Alpha. We realized she was academically behind — three years behind, to be exact. She had only mastered up to fifth-grade concepts. Within one year of working with an AI tutor, she was ready for high school. Read that again. Almost four years of schooling, absorbed in just 365 days. That’s a staggering amount of information for anyone to digest in such a short amount of time, much less a child. Such is the power of personalized AI tutoring. What if every kid in the classroom could have their own unique lesson plan like this? Every facet of the curriculum tailored to their struggles, their interests, their own little starburst of genius. This is a sneak peek into the Alpha classroom. Struggling with math? An AI tutor not only blocks out extra time for students

Why traditional school is broken (and how we’re fixing it)

The greatest untapped resource on the planet isn’t nuclear energy or deep-sea minerals, genetic engineering or outer space exploration; it’s human potential. And what human has more potential than a child? You’d think we’d pour our best effort into educating them, exhausting all possible options. But we don’t. Most parents know more about the difference between the oat milk from Trader Joe’s and the oat milk from Whole Foods than they know about their own kids’ education. (Not an insult, just a fact.) And it’s why I’m writing to you today. To be clear, I don’t enjoy harping on the fact that conventional education is broken. There are too many rage-baiters and doomsdayers out there: “public school sucks!” or “save your kid from public school while you still can!” I am not one of them. That’s coming at the problem from the wrong angle. Parents shouldn’t have to ask, “What’s wrong with my kids’ school?” They should be asking, excitedly, “How good can my kids’ school really get? How high is high?” But to answer that, we have to first understand where we are. And to be honest, it’s not pretty. My goal is to give you the unvarnished truth of our education system as a whole, so you can start building your own opinion and making the best possible decision for your family. Let’s start from the beginning. 400 BCE: The golden age of personalized educationFor over 1,000 years, education was a deeply personalized experience. It was the golden age of tutors: Socrates tutored Plato, who tutored Aristotle, who tutored Alexander the Great. You get the picture. The problem was, only the wealthy could afford high-quality tutors. Personalized learning may have been the pinnacle of education, but it was far from accessible. Naturally, alternative solutions were born. 1837: The birth of standardized schoolingThe Massachusetts Board of Education was founded, and Horace Mann became its first secretary. Mann championed the common school movement, meaning he wanted to provide accessible education for everyone. Certainly, this is a vision we can all stand behind. But his method? Not so much. Mann was deeply inspired by the Prussian education system, which emphasized obedience, discipline, and standardized instruction. (This system was initially founded as a way to unify the Prussian state after the Napoleonic wars. In other words, to govern populations that the Prussian army invaded.) The goal: mold loyal, compliant citizens. German philosopher Johann Gottlieb Fichte described the role of standardization: “Education should aim at destroying free will so that after pupils are thus schooled they will be incapable throughout the rest of their lives of thinking or acting otherwise than as their schoolmasters would have wished … When the technique has been perfected, every government that has been in charge of education for more than one generation will be able to control its subjects securely without the need of armies or policemen.” Not off to a super stellar start. 1840s: Noble intentions, sour resultsTo be fair, Horace Mann is not the Captain Hook of this story. His inclination toward standardization came from noble intentions. He believed that standardized classrooms would bridge opportunity gaps and give every kid — regardless of race, gender, or class — a fighting chance to succeed. But noble intentions quickly soured in the face of behemoth bureaucracy. 1860s – 1900: The Industrial Revolution and factory-style schoolingAs the Industrial Age surged forward, factory-style schooling became the norm. More than anyone, industrialists eagerly latched onto the idea of standardization. Why? Because a standardized classroom could produce workers who were 1) punctual, 2) obedient, and 3) didn’t ask questions about the way things were done. In other words, “the perfect employee.” Take Andrew Carnegie, for example. After conquering American steel, Carnegie needed a pipeline of workers — mine operators, safety engineers, railroad conductors, furnace workers — to keep his empire running. He poured money into education, funding libraries and endowing institutions, in hopes to build the workforce he needed. Factory-style schooling for factory-style jobs meant serving the most common denominator, everything geared towards the “average” student: Bright students became bored and disengaged. Struggling students fell further and further behind. Every student was treated like a product on an assembly line: same curriculum, same pace, same progression. 1902: Rockefeller and his “nation of workers”Then, John D. Rockefeller founded the General Education Board in hopes to improve public education. However, Rockefeller’s advisor — Frederick T. Gates — painted a very different picture of their intentions. In his vision for education, Gates wrote: “In our dreams…people yield themselves with perfect docility to our molding hands. The present educational conventions fade from our minds, and unhampered by tradition we work our own good will upon a grateful and responsive folk.” And if that isn’t enough to make your eyes twitch, try this one: “We shall not try to make these people or any of their children into philosophers or men of learning or men of science. We have not to raise up from among them authors, educators, poets or men of letters. We shall not search for embryo great artists, painters, musicians, nor lawyers, doctors, preachers, politicians, statesmen, of whom we have ample supply.” Standardization was once a noble vision — “accessible education for all” — but the actual implementation of it was never about unleashing the potential of future generations. 1900s – Present: Conformity over brillianceAnd here we stand, rooted in these Industrial Age ideals. Efficiency. Utility. Talking out of turn gets you detention, but silence is rewarded with a sticker. Everyone learns the same thing at the same pace at the same time. Conformity. Compliance. While these are important facets of education — following instruction, respecting authority, knowing when to toss ideas into the ring and when to keep them close — there is a deeper well to education that traditional school simply does not tap into. And it’s universal. Whether you’re in sub-Saharan Africa or rural Ohio or glitzy Beverly Hills, all kids are educated the same way. The issue is

Texas Alpha School teaches high school students with AI

A high school in Austin, Texas uses artificial intelligence to teach core subjects, with even passion projects incorporating AI. All programs are highly personalized, even tracking and managing students’ procrastination. Adults in the classroom serve as guides rather than traditional teachers, focusing on motivating and supporting students. Read the full article here