A private K-12 network in Austin, Texas, is betting big on artificial intelligence to personalize academics, charging families $40,000 a year for a model that replaces traditional teachers with high-paid “guides.” Students spend two morning hours on AI-driven lessons in core subjects at their own pace, then shift to project work and life skills in the afternoon. Founder MacKenzie Price, a nontraditional educator, says the approach enables students to learn at the right level and speed; the school reports top 1% standardized test results across its now 16 campuses. The model has drawn attention from policymakers—Secretary of Education Linda McMahon visited recently—as well as skepticism from educators who question the evidence base and worry about handing instruction to algorithms. Alpha says guides meet one-on-one weekly with every student to ensure human connection and oversight. The school hopes its results will influence public systems, but the steep tuition underscores equity and scalability concerns.
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