2/17/2026 at 5:46:37 PM
Besides the coverage from fox news/new york times that the article mentions, there's also a much more extensive review from a parent who had his kids in alpha school: https://www.astralcodexten.com/p/your-review-alpha-schoolby gruez
2/17/2026 at 7:00:56 PM
This section reveals a lot about the difference between the hype and the practice:> It isn’t genuine two‑hour learning: most kids start school at 8:30am, start working on the “two-hour platform” sometime between 9am-930am and are occupied with academics until noon-1230pm. They also blend in “surges” from time to time to squeeze in more hours on the platform.
> It isn’t AI in the way we have been thinking about it since the “Attention is all you need” paper. There is no “generative AI” powered by OpenAI, Gemini or Claude in the platform the kids use – it is closer to “turbocharged spreadsheet checklist with a spaced‑repetition algorithm”
> It definitely isn’t teacher‑free: Teachers have been rebranded “guides”, and while their workload is different than a traditional school, they are very important – and both the quantity and quality are much higher than traditional schools.
> The bundle matters: it’s not just the learning platform on its own. A big part of the product’s success is how the school has set up student incentives and the culture they have built to make everything work together
So in other words, they're trying to set up a generally high quality education system, but they have a marketer on board who knows how to capture headlines with controversial claims?
by Aurornis
2/17/2026 at 7:10:52 PM
It sounds like they are trying to replicate Asian style rote learning and cram school in a way that's more palatable to western audiences. Rebranding rote learning and force feeding as spaced repetition and surges. Typical SV bull.by Onavo
2/18/2026 at 12:34:42 AM
Rote learning isn't the be-all-end-all of education, but it's actually very important. You can't think anything interesting without knowing stuff to think about. Facts are important. Memorization is important.by exolymph
2/18/2026 at 5:50:35 AM
The problem comes when rote learning actually is the be-all-end-all. Too many Asian students experience rote learning without any focus on actual learning. Our job used to be regurgitating paragraphs from textbooks, exactly as they were, into our exam papers. In classrooms, we were told that war happened in year X, but there was no discussion and analysis as to actual reasons, the milieu at the time, and the understanding and takeaway from that piece of history.Facts and memorization are important, but they need to be in service to actual learning and understanding.
by sometimes_all
2/17/2026 at 7:24:56 PM
The fact that they've rebranded teachers gives me concern that they're trying to further devalue teaching as a profession (if that's possible) and remove some of the professional expectations and protections that teaching still has.by brendoelfrendo
2/17/2026 at 7:38:25 PM
From the article I linked:>When I asked the head of admissions how they found such good staff he told me their compensation was fully transparent. “Associate Guides” were paid $60,000/year (vs the $40,000 average for Austin teachers), “Full Guides” made $100,000 and the five “Head Guides” in the school each made $150,000. They were able to both poach the best teachers from other schools, but also bring exceptional people into teaching that would not have considered it otherwise. It also let them have very high expectations for teachers once they were hired.
by gruez
2/17/2026 at 7:46:37 PM
Yes, I am sure all billionaires will send their children to that school instead of some Montessori school or Eton.by rbhtjk
2/17/2026 at 8:03:49 PM
You dont need to be a billionaire to be able to afford a good school for your children if the public ones dont meet your criteria.Im not sure about this particular school, but i am greatly disappointed at baseline california core requirements for math and science in middle school and the parents choice is to either have your child be bored in school while complementing their education with RSM or Singapore Math after hours Or to choose a private school that will make your child more competitive with kids being educated by other countries systems.
by vladgur
2/17/2026 at 9:55:47 PM
Public education caters to the common denominator…the public. If you want higher rigor and standards set for your children, then you will need to find alternatives - which, in some areas, are no better than the public schools.I wouldn’t blame the system for poor standards. Their standards are actually decent for most children. The problem is that teachers are forced to spend a significant portion of time and energy on classroom management.
Couple that with the fact that most parents aren’t reading to their children at night, so those kids grow up falling behind the curve. Reading comprehension drops -> other subjects follow suit. Rinse and repeat each year, and you eventually end up with high-school seniors reading far below their grade level.
The teachers now have to scaffold all of their content. The kids who didn’t fall behind? They receive no attention from the teacher who is instead focused on helping the kid with a 3rd grade reading ability to try to understand the content.
An indirect tragedy of the commons, where parents are relying on public education to raise and teach children with no input of their own.
by dvaun
2/17/2026 at 10:38:22 PM
Not a billionaire, but pretty well off. Unlike the college loan grift that we also need to address, you're not getting a parent plus loan to help your 3rd grader.>i am greatly disappointed at baseline california core requirements for math and science
Don't look at the other states, then. I agree the standards are low, but they can't even meet those marks. You don't improve that by raising bar and expecting students to keep up. All while continuing to defund education.
For me, it was a matter that they identified me early on elementary and basically put me a year ahead in studies. By middle school they called it "honor students". And I only studied in public schools (well, a charter high school. But I was guaranteed in since I lived in the neighborhood).
by johnnyanmac
2/18/2026 at 11:42:57 PM
I dont think California education is defunded. Mismanaged yes, wrong incentives and priorities, yes.Quick google search shows that my district has nearly a budget of $195,927,382 for years 2024-2025 serving 10,278 students. Thats nearly 20k per student. THe district employed 481(<22 student per teacher on avg) teachers and 480 admin staff.
Residents of my school district constantly vote for bonds to pay for capital school upgrades(thanks Prop 13) in addition to high amount property taxes. We dont have an issue of defunding the education here.
Our education is non-competitive with Asian and European ones not because we cant afford it, but because its mismanaged, incorrectly incentivised and often ideological (math is racist).
by vladgur
2/17/2026 at 7:37:48 PM
That's a legitimate concern, but the "Guide" terminology actually comes from traditional Montessori schools.by realslimjd
2/18/2026 at 12:09:37 AM
The conspiracy runs deeper than we thought. Is the Montessori method primarily a mechanism to devalue labour unions?!by renewiltord
2/17/2026 at 11:28:59 PM
Eh. Montessori schools have done this for a while.It's mostly signaling, but does reenforce that it's on the student to learn - not the teacher to force it into their brain.
by SkyPuncher
2/17/2026 at 7:08:52 PM
They're copying one of Khan Academy's implementation models [1] and rebranding it as AI. It's certainly not new besides the "help yourself to AI" part (which, full disclosure, Khan Academy is working on as well with their "Khanmigo" assistant [2]). Sal Khan, the founder and CEO of Khan Academy, did a TED talk [3] on this.[1] https://en.khanacademy.org/khan-for-educators/
[3] How AI Could Save (Not Destroy) Education | Sal Khan | TED - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hJP5GqnTrNo - May 1st, 2023
by toomuchtodo
2/17/2026 at 7:47:20 PM
Here's another Alpha parent responding to that review: https://naimoli.com/peter/posts/2xlearning/Summary: the '2× learning' claims are overblown.
by rahimnathwani
2/17/2026 at 6:45:11 PM
So not really AI, but a well run private school with high achieving students. Looks like they do optimize the learning strategies.by vondur
2/17/2026 at 6:29:52 PM
The scrollbar is completely absent in Firefox. I think this is the first time I've seen long-form content with zero visual indication where I currently am in the document. Crazy.Edit: Actually the scroll-bar is there, but it's nearly impossible to see because of the low contrast with the background. I guess I can blame my user agent for this one.
by recursive
2/19/2026 at 8:16:55 PM
dark reader (add-on) fixes both the scrollbar and the general color schemeby siddbudd
2/17/2026 at 7:25:40 PM
I really, really hate the modern trend of scrollbar design. I guess it makes some amount of sense if you're aiming for a mobile phone factor, where real estate is somewhat limited, but changing the scrollbar from a widget that lives functionally outside of the content it is scrolling to a translucent show-only-on-hover widget that overlays the content (and can thus become functionally invisible if the content is just the wrong color) is a real step backwards in UI design.by jcranmer
2/17/2026 at 8:00:48 PM
I finally got frustrated enough to go in and manually increase the default scrollbar size in Firefox. Slim scrollbars are awful both to look at and to use. I'm working with an ultrawide monitor here, please give me more than 0-3 pixels of scrollbar!by Dusseldorf
2/17/2026 at 8:03:32 PM
I didn't know this was possible. This is amazing! I found it under the inconspicuous config item called "widget.non-native-theme.scrollbar.style". I changed it from 0 to 4. There seems to be no UI for this.by recursive
2/17/2026 at 7:44:48 PM
So this Astral Codex external submission is what? Did Scott Alexander verify that these parents are real?Usual rambling from a site that disables scrolling and nearly crashes Firefox.
by rbhtjk
2/17/2026 at 7:15:36 PM
keep in mind this piece was 8 months ago (and probably starting to be written much earlier). I can see Alpha school being this genuine effort to offer an alternative education plan as well as slowly falling into the AI hype later on and pushing more generative content as it tries to phase out teachers.Or, if it's being praised by this administration, it's doing so to gain political points.
by johnnyanmac
2/17/2026 at 6:04:05 PM
Holy crap that is a long article. In my view, the only important point is time freed up which should be a part of normal education. If students had more free time to think and contemplate one wonders what kind of world we would live in.Too bad it takes a dubious idea for an AI school to surface that wisdom.
by trinsic2
2/17/2026 at 7:01:24 PM
>the only important point is time freed up which should be a part of normal education.College felt like the last time I truly had "time freed up". 16 units of classes per quarter came down to ~8-10 hours of class time per week and the recommendation was 2 hour of study per class unit a week (e.g. a 4 unit class recommends 8 hours of study a week). So, typical full time work. But mostly on campus (aka a walkable community), close to peers, with no worries of future responsibilities.
now of course, the CS curriculum easily required double or triple that recommendation, but that speaks more towards the subject than the concept of college.
by johnnyanmac
2/17/2026 at 7:18:20 PM
Well people who are evangelically praising AI for writing code seem to be converging on established, well-known software practices for "making the AI work better" so seems like AI is great at making people rediscover the practices they didn't feel like putting effort into before AI.by ambicapter