Bill Ackman Backs AI-Powered Private School Reshaping K-12 Education While Avoiding Diversity, Equity And Inclusion Lessons

Benzinga_recent_news
08/21

Billionaire investor Bill Ackman is backing Alpha School. This rapidly growing private institution utilizes artificial intelligence to condense academic content into two hours a day, while steering clear of diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives.

Ackman praised Alpha in a post on X on Wednesday, calling it "the first truly breakthrough innovation in K-12 education" since the KIPP Academy. 

"Two hours of a dedicated AI personal tutor customized for your child's academic program. Four hours of leadership and life skills. No homework. Daily real-time data on how your child is doing," Ackman wrote. 

"Alpha kids love school and have incredible outcomes."

Alpha, founded more than a decade ago by MacKenzie Price, calls its teachers "guides" and emphasizes non-academic learning in the afternoons, from bike rides to personal projects. 

The school has campuses in Texas, Florida and California, and is opening a kindergarten through eighth-grade location in New York City this fall. Tuition runs between $40,000 and $65,000 annually.

Price said Alpha deliberately avoids political and cultural debates. "We do not let anything—political, social issues—come in the way," she told The Wall Street Journal.

See Also: Grant Cardone Says, ‘America About To Have Greatest Resurgence In Its 250-Year History,' Thanks Trump For Encouraging Big Tech To Come Home

In April, President Donald Trump signed executive orders directing federal agencies to expand AI certification programs and strengthen AI learning in schools.

In May, over 250 Fortune 500 CEOs, including Microsoft Corp. MSFT Satya Nadella, Dell Technologies Inc. DELL Michael Dell, Advanced Micro Devices Inc. AMD Lisa Su, Palantir Technologies Inc. PLTR CEO Alex Karp and Uber Technologies Inc. UBER Dara Khosrowshahi, urged policymakers to prioritize AI and computer science education for K-12 students through the Unlock8 campaign, warning that global competitors had already made such training mandatory.

Earlier this month, Alphabet Inc. GOOGL GOOG subsidiary Google committed $1 billion to support U.S. colleges and nonprofits with AI resources, partnering with over 100 universities and offering students advanced access to its Gemini chatbot and other AI tools.

Tech leaders voiced concerns about the rapid pace of artificial intelligence.

Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates warned that AI was advancing faster than expected, raising uncertainty about when it might replace human workers.

Nvidia Corp. NVDA CEO Jensen Huang also cautioned that AI would transform the job market by eliminating repetitive tasks and stressed that those who failed to embrace AI risked being left behind.

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Disclaimer: This content was partially produced with the help of AI tools and was reviewed and published by Benzinga editors.

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