
> ## Documentation Index
> Fetch the complete website index at: https://alpha.school/llms.txt
> Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

# Page

- **Name**: Alpha Bans ChatGPT in Academics. Here’s Why.
- **URL**: https://alpha.school/blog/alpha-bans-chatgpt-in-academics-heres-why/
- **Description**: Chatbots are out. AI tutors are in.

It’s inevitable that AI is becoming the quiet engine of our lives. Which means, **AI has officially declared “checkmate” on traditional education.**

Everything we *think* we know about school is about to change. And we have to embrace this change with open arms. Why? Because we cannot afford for education to stay stuck in the past while society surges forward. Otherwise, what’s the point of school? Why prepare kids for a world that no longer exists?

Classrooms *must* adapt to AI. Just probably not in the way you think.

The hard truth about “cheatbots”
--------------------------------

Let me ease your mind: the future of education is *bright*. And it has nothing to do with chatbots.

Many traditional classrooms are already implementing chatbots in an attempt to “adapt” to AI. But honestly, **this is worst-case scenario**.

Chat-based AI tools like ChatGPT, Lex, or Claude might as well be neon blinking signs for students: *“Me, me, me! I can help you cheat!”* There’s a reason the internet has dubbed them “cheatbots.” They discourage critical thinking. They encourage laziness and disengagement. And they definitely don’t help students develop agency or ownership over their own education. In no way do chatbots help students become self-directed learners.

How else can we use AI to revolutionize education in a way that actually works?

The answer: **AI tutors.**

Welcome to the golden age of AI tutoring
----------------------------------------

Learning scientists have known for over forty years that one teacher lecturing a group of twenty-five students is the *worst* way to teach something new.

Problem is, it’s all you and I have ever known.

Take away the teacher lecturing at the front of the classroom, and suddenly, things get scary. *What could school possibly look like without a teacher giving a lecture*? But I’m here to reassure you. These aren’t arbitrary claims; they’re rooted in learning science.

Students only retain about 5% of material they hear in a lecture. That’s a frighteningly small amount of knowledge, considering lecture-based environments are the foundation of traditional schools. We’ve gotten away with this model for a long time, but as technology advances, it’s collapsing. Lecture-based environments are experiencing a [steady decline](https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2025/feb/19/teaching-to-an-empty-hall-is-the-changing-face-of-universities-eroding-standards-of-learning?utm_source=chatgpt.com) with even less student engagement.

Back in the 1980s, educational psychologist **Benjamin Bloom** conducted groundbreaking research comparing learning environments: traditional classroom instruction vs. one-on-one tutoring. His findings were staggering. Students who received one-on-one tutoring performed two standard deviations (or two sigma) better than students in a conventional classroom. That’s enough to move an average student into the top 2% of their peers.

This is known as **[Bloom’s 2 Sigma Problem](https://web.mit.edu/5.95/readings/bloom-two-sigma.pdf)**. How do we scale the massive benefits of personal tutoring to every student, without needing a private tutor for every child?

For decades, the answer seemed impossible.

But with AI, we can now deliver this personalized learning at scale.

Say we remove the teacher from the front of the classroom. Not from the classroom completely; just *the front* of the classroom. No more lectures. No more passive learning. Instead, AI tutors deliver personalized academic curriculum to students.

In fact, **studies show that it’s** ***better*** **to learn from an AI tutor**:

- In [a recent Harvard study](https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2024/09/professor-tailored-ai-tutor-to-physics-course-engagement-doubled/), learning from AI tutors doubled engagement in the classroom.
- A 2023 McKinsey study found students using AI tutors gained an extra year of learning in just six months.
- Stanford research shows AI-tutored students performed 30% better on tests than those in traditional classrooms.
- Khan Academy’s AI tutor found that students using AI were twice as likely to persist through difficult problems.

But what does an AI tutor actually look like?

A decade ago, I co-founded [Alpha School](https://alpha.school/the-program/), where students complete their academics in just two hours a day and learn twice as fast as their peers in traditional classrooms. Students don’t receive academic instruction from chatbots or teachers. Instead, they use AI-powered learning platforms.

Learning platforms are pretty common. You’ll find them used in many traditional classrooms and almost all college classrooms. But with AI, this capability expands.

Each morning, Alpha students arrive at school. When they log onto their personal dashboard, ready to tackle their academics for the day, the AI is the underlying platform that ensures they jump directly into the correct material for their knowledge level. This is called “[the zone of proximal development](https://www.simplypsychology.org/zone-of-proximal-development.html).”

Essentially, “zone of proximal development” is when students are learning at *just the right level* to help them grow. **This is Alpha academics in a nutshell**: every student following a prescribed learning plan in their zone of proximal development. Each student can learn standard Common Core curriculum at their own pace, on their own time, to total mastery.

The AI determines if kids are being challenged too much or not enough. It measures their focus and engagement. It makes sure students aren’t jumping ahead or skimming through material. Not to mention, the AI is constantly collecting data to send to both teachers and parents, providing statistical insights into *how* and *what* their kid is learning. Honestly, the AI functions like an undercover cop.

It’s funny: if you were to ask one of our students, “Hey, tell me about your AI tutor!” they’d probably look at you with a blank face. (“What AI tutor? I use adaptive apps like AlphaRead and AlphaWrite.”) And that’s honestly the gist of what “AI tutoring” really looks like.

*“Cheatbots”* are out. *AI-powered personalized learning plans* are in.

But what about teachers?

AI tutors free teachers to “mentor” instead of “teach”
------------------------------------------------------

Teachers are the backbone of every school, and no technology can ever replace their impact. But let’s be honest: their impact doesn’t come from PowerPoints on quadratic equations. It comes from one-on-one connections with students.

The #1 desire of a teacher is direct engagement with their students. It’s why they join the profession in the first place: to positively impact the next generation.

Crazy thing is, **teachers spend** ***less than half of their careers*** **actually doing it.**

![](https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/%24s_!kjqm!,w_1456,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F8c4fb380-ab89-41f6-a155-bcd9cec36980_692x358.png) 

This data from [McKinsey](https://www.mckinsey.com/~/media/McKinsey/Industries/Social%20Sector/Our%20Insights/How%20artificial%20intelligence%20will%20impact%20K%2012%20teachers/How-artificial-intelligence-will-impact-K-12-teachers.pdf) confirms what we already know: unfortunately, traditional classrooms aren’t built to sustain one-on-one relationships between teachers and students.

**But AI tutoring does.**

The teaching profession will finally shift away from lectures, homework assignments, and grading papers, and lean into motivation, inspiration, and deep personal mentorship.

AI tutors won’t replace teachers, but free them to do what they’re best at: motivate and emotionally support their students. Teachers will finally wake up on a Monday morning and know they’re doing the work they signed up for in the first place.

Education will \*finally\* unlock human potential
-------------------------------------------------

When I think about the future of education, I don’t envision teachers giving lectures or students using ChatGPT to write their essays for them.

Instead, I picture a kid walking into school excited, confident, and ready to tackle challenges tailored just for them. I picture a teacher smiling, knowing their day will be spent mentoring kids one-on-one, not micromanaging 30 disengaged students at the same time.

Thanks to AI tutors, that vision is within reach.

**AI tutors are the most powerful tool we have to drag education into the 21st century**. They finally give education a chance to do what it was always meant to do: *unlock human potential.*

## Structured data

### Organization

- **Alpha School (https://alpha.school/)**
  - **SameAs**: https://www.facebook.com/AlphaSchoolAustin, https://www.youtube.com/@thealphaschool, https://www.instagram.com/alphaschool_2hrlearning, https://x.com/AlphaSchoolATX, https://www.linkedin.com/company/alphaschools/, https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q134113130, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alpha_School
  - **School locations**:
    - [Texas > Austin](https://alpha.school/austin/)
    - [Texas > Brownsville](https://alpha.school/brownsville/)
    - [Texas > Dallas > Plano](https://alpha.school/plano/)
    - [Texas > Fort Worth](https://alpha.school/fort-worth/)
    - [Arizona > Scottsdale](https://alpha.school/scottsdale/)
    - [California > San Francisco](https://alpha.school/san-francisco/)
    - [California > Santa Barbara](https://alpha.school/santa-barbara/)
    - [California > Orange County](https://alpha.school/orange-county/)
    - [Florida > Miami](https://alpha.school/miami/)
    - [Florida > Palm Beach](https://alpha.school/palm-beach/)
    - [New York > New York City](https://alpha.school/new-york-city/)
    - [Virginia > DC > Chantilly](https://alpha.school/chantilly/)
    - [Opening Fall 2026 > California > East Bay](https://alpha.school/east-bay/)
    - [Opening Fall 2026 > California > Palo Alto](https://alpha.school/palo-alto/)
    - [Opening Fall 2026 > California > Santa Monica](https://alpha.school/santa-monica/)
    - [Opening Fall 2026 > Georgia > Atlanta](https://alpha.school/atlanta/)
    - [Opening Fall 2026 > Illinois > Chicago](https://alpha.school/chicago/)
    - [Opening Fall 2026 > North Carolina > Charlotte](https://alpha.school/charlotte/)
    - [Opening Fall 2026 > North Carolina > Raleigh](https://alpha.school/raleigh/)
    - [Opening Fall 2026 > Puerto Rico > Dorado](https://alpha.school/dorado/)
    - [Opening Fall 2026 > Texas > Houston > The Woodlands](https://alpha.school/the-woodlands/)
    - [Opening Fall 2026 > Texas > Southlake](https://alpha.school/southlake/)

### FAQs

- **What is Alpha School?**: Alpha School is a private K-12 school that uses an AI-powered platform to teach all academic subjects in a hyper-efficient two-hour block, allowing students to learn up to 10 times faster than in traditional schools. The rest of the day is spent on project-based "life skills."
- **Why hasn't the education model changed in 200 years?**: The current model of a teacher in front of a class of 20-30 students was created for the industrial age as a way to deliver mass education. While learning science has known for 40 years that this is one of the worst ways to teach, there hasn't been a technology that could deliver individualized, mastery-based instruction at scale until the recent advent of Generative AI.
- **What does "mastery-based learning" actually mean at Alpha?**: It means a student must prove they understand a concept with over 90% accuracy before the system allows them to move on. In traditional schools, a student can pass with 70%, meaning they miss 30% of the material. Alpha's approach is like sports: you master the fundamentals (like dribbling) before you practice advanced plays (the alley-oop). This prevents the knowledge gaps that cause students to struggle later on.
- **Can this system help students who are already far behind?**: Yes. Because the learning rate is so fast, students can catch up quickly. An entire grade level of material in one subject only takes 20 to 30 hours to master on the platform. A student who is two years behind is only about 40-60 hours of work away from being at grade level, a gap that can be closed in a matter of months.
- **What do kids do for the rest of the day after the two hours of academics?**: They participate in hands-on, collaborative workshops designed to teach life skills. Examples include fifth graders running a profitable Airbnb, launching a food truck, second graders training for and running a 5K, and high schoolers producing a Broadway-style musical.
- **How do you scale the "life skills" portion of the day? Isn't that hard to standardize?**: For K-8 students, Alpha has developed a structured curriculum of workshops and projects that can be rolled out systematically across campuses. For high schoolers, the model shifts to a "super passion project" where students have four years to work on a major, self-directed goal with mentorship, forcing them to become self-driven learners who can source their own resources.
- **What is the role of teachers? Are they replaced by AI?**: Adults are critical, but their role changes completely. They are called "Guides" and do zero academic teaching. Their entire job is to motivate, mentor, build relationships, and facilitate the afternoon life skill workshops.
- **How much are "Guides" paid compared to traditional teachers?**: The minimum pay for a Guide at Alpha is $100,000, which is roughly double the average teacher pay in the Austin market. This allows the school to attract top talent from both inside and outside the traditional education field.
- **What are the biggest challenges or skeptical arguments against this model?**: The primary challenge is proving it can work at scale outside of a well-funded private school with a select student body. Another issue is that parents have very different ideas about the purpose of education; some prioritize academics, while others value social aspects or other skills, making a "one-size-fits-all" solution difficult. The technology itself also needs refinement to eliminate AI errors or "hallucinations."
- **My child will be on a screen for two hours straight. Is that healthy?**: Alpha views this as "very good screen time." Unlike passive consumption, your child is actively engaged in a learning dialogue with the AI tutor. The system is designed for focus, using 25-minute "Pomodoro" sessions for each subject. The goal is maximum efficiency to free up the rest of the day for screen-free, collaborative activities.
- **How do you prevent my child from just using the AI to cheat?**: This is a key design feature. The "Time Back" platform is not a chatbot like ChatGPT, which is often used for cheating. The AI's purpose is to generate personalized lessons and questions and then provide targeted feedback. It acts as a tutor and a coach, not an answer machine. Functions that would enable cheating are not activated.
- **How do I know this is actually working? Do you use standardized tests?**: Yes. Alpha uses third-party standardized tests, like the MAPS test, to measure progress. Parents receive a mid-year update showing their child's growth. The results consistently show that in two hours a day, students learn twice as much as their peers who spend six hours a day in a traditional classroom.
- **What happens if my child gets stuck on a problem? Is there a human to help?**: Absolutely. While the AI is the primary academic instructor, the "Guides" (teachers) constantly monitor student progress. During the two-hour academic block, Guides will frequently pull students aside for one-on-one check-ins to offer encouragement, discuss challenges, and ensure they feel supported.
- **My child is already gifted and ahead of their grade. Will they be bored?**: No, this model is ideal for gifted students. Because learning isn't tied to a grade level, a student at the 99th percentile isn't capped. The system will continue to feed them advanced material at their own pace, allowing them to get years ahead of their peers.
- **With only two hours of academics, does this mean no homework?**: That's the goal. The system is designed to be so efficient that the traditional model of a six-hour school day plus homework becomes completely unnecessary. The only exception is for students who are significantly behind when they start and choose to do extra work to catch up faster.
- **How do you motivate my child to do the work? What if they don't want to?**: Motivation is 90% of the solution at Alpha. While the main motivator is earning back four hours of their day for fun projects, the school uses many other tools tailored to the child. This can range from earning stickers or a class petting zoo for younger kids, to friendly competition on leaderboards, to earning "Alpha Bucks" to fund their passion projects or learn financial literacy.
- **If kids are on computers, how do they develop social skills?**: Socialization is a primary focus of the other four hours of the day. The afternoon life-skill workshops are team-based, collaborative, and project-driven. This is where students learn teamwork, leadership, and relationship-building by working together on real-world challenges, like running a business.
- **You set very high standards, like running a 5K. What if my child fails or isn't athletic?**: The philosophy is "high standards, high support." The goal isn't just the achievement itself, but teaching the process of reaching a difficult goal. In the 5K example, students are taught "atomic habits" and start by simply walking the track. They build up incrementally with constant encouragement from their Guide. The program teaches them how to do hard things, building resilience and a growth mindset.
- **This sounds very different and risky. How can I be sure it's the right choice for my child?**: The founder acknowledges that it can seem "weird" at first because it's so different from our own experience. However, the model is based on 40 years of proven learning science. The school's commitments are clear: your child will love school, they will learn twice as fast, and they will learn critical life skills. The school uses hard data from standardized tests to prove the academic results, and the high engagement in the afternoon workshops speaks for itself.
- **This is a high-end private school. Is this model just for rich kids?**: The physical Alpha School campuses are expensive, but the long-term vision is the opposite. The goal is to perfect the "Time Back" software platform and make it accessible and affordable for everyone. The vision is a future where any child on the planet can get a world-class education for two hours a day on a sub-$1000 tablet.
- **Why is American K-12 education doing so poorly despite massive spending?**: The system is built on a flawed, time-based model. We advance students every year based on age, not on whether they've mastered the material. This creates compounding knowledge gaps, leading to a steady decline in performance as students are promoted with a weak foundation.
- **What is the single biggest unlock to fix education?**: Switching from a time-based system to a mastery-based system where students must demonstrate proficiency before moving on. This ensures every child has a solid foundation. When powered by AI tutors, this approach is highly efficient and scalable.
- **How can kids really learn 10 times faster?**: Traditional classrooms are incredibly inefficient, with retention from lectures as low as 5%.4 An AI tutor provides a personalized, one-on-one lesson plan for each student, keeping them in the optimal learning zone (the "zone of proximal development").5 It ensures they master basics before advancing, eliminating time wasted on remediation and allowing them to cover material much more quickly. An entire year's math curriculum can be mastered in just 20-30 hours.
- **Isn't paying kids to get good grades a bad idea?**: It can be a powerful "unlock." For a student who believes they "can't" succeed, an extrinsic motivator like a $1,000 reward can provide the initial push needed to do the work. Once they achieve a high standard they thought was impossible, their entire self-perception changes, creating a powerful intrinsic motivation that lasts long after the reward is gone. It's the kindling that starts the fire.
- **What is the role of human teachers if AI is doing the teaching?**: Their role becomes more important, not less. Freed from grading tests and delivering repetitive lectures, they become guides and mentors. They focus on connecting with students one-on-one, providing motivational and emotional support, setting high standards, and teaching the life skills—leadership, teamwork, public speaking—that AI can't.
- **What is a mastery-based system?**: It's an educational approach where students progress based on their mastery of a concept, not on a fixed schedule. If you don't understand fractions, you don't move on to algebra. This prevents the knowledge gaps that plague the traditional system.
- **How does the "2-hour learning" block work?**: Students spend a focused, two-hour block on core academics using AI-powered apps. Once they complete their daily lessons to a mastery standard, their "school work" is done. The rest of the day is freed up for workshops, sports, and projects focused on life skills.
- **What are the key principles of learning science you use?**: The model incorporates well-established concepts like Bloom's 2 Sigma (the effectiveness of tutoring), the zone of proximal development (keeping content not too hard, not too easy), cognitive load theory (not overloading working memory), and active learning (testing over passive listening).
- **How is AI the "light microscope" for education?**: For decades, learning science has described a better way to teach, but it was impossible to implement at scale in a traditional classroom. AI is the instrument that finally allows us to measure what a student knows with precision and deliver a perfectly tailored, one-on-one lesson, making the theories of learning science a practical reality for every child.
- **How will Generative AI create better lessons?**: Generative AI can create dynamic, endlessly engaging content tailored to each child's interests.6 If a student loves baseball, their math problems will be about batting averages. If they love the musical Hamilton, their history lessons will be presented as song lyrics. This makes learning compelling and relevant, not a chore.
- **Is there still a technology risk in this model?**: While the technology will continue to improve, the core principles can be implemented today. Even with current "static" AI-curated content, students can learn 3-5 times faster. The primary risk is not technological but sociological: getting society to adopt a fundamentally new model for schooling.
- **Why hasn't this been done before if the ideas are 40 years old?**: Because there was no scalable, cost-effective technology to deliver personalized, mastery-based tutoring. You couldn't give every child a dedicated human tutor. AI is the first tool that can provide that one-on-one relationship to millions of students simultaneously.
- **What's the biggest obstacle to adoption?**: Inertia and mindset. The "teacher in front of a classroom" model is all anyone knows. The biggest challenge is convincing parents, educators, and policymakers to embrace a complete rebuild of the school day, even if it's proven to be vastly superior.
- **How do you plan to make this model affordable and accessible to everyone?**: The cost is primarily in the AI compute, which is currently expensive. However, with the rapid development of on-device AI chips, the expectation is that within 3-5 years, a sub-$1000 tablet will have all the local processing power needed to run these AI tutors. The goal is to make this accessible to a billion kids, including through public and charter schools.
- **What is Alpha School's core philosophy?**: It's built on three commitments to parents: 1) Your child will love school more than vacation. 2) Your child will master academics and score in the top 1% nationally, but in only two hours per day. 3) The key to your child's happiness and success is being held to high standards in a highly supportive environment.
- **What kind of person is a "Guide" at Alpha School?**: Guides are responsible for motivational and emotional support, not academic instruction. Alpha hires two main groups: the world's best traditional teachers who are thrilled to stop lecturing and grading quizzes, and high-achieving individuals like ex-coaches, athletes, and Olympians who serve as impressive role models and can motivate kids to achieve greatness.
- **How does Alpha deal with students who are behind academically?**: The AI platform first assesses them to find their true knowledge level, ignoring their age or previous grades. Because a full grade level of material only takes about 20 hours to master, a student who is three years behind can catch up in just 60 hours. Liemandt says, "We can catch them up in no time."
- **Why doesn't Alpha use chatbots if it's an AI-powered school?**: Liemandt states that chatbots are terrible for learning because 90% of kids use them to cheat, turning them into "cheatbots." Instead of chat, Alpha's AI uses a vision model that watches the student's screen and coaches them on their learning process, with a "waste meter" that shows them how much time they are wasting.
- **What exactly is happening in the “two‑hour academic day”?**: Students work one‑on‑one with an AI tutor (no teacher lecturing) and, according to Liemandt, learn over twice as much as peers in six hours plus homework; he claims Alpha’s classes are top‑1%, and catch‑up from bottom to top quartile can happen in ~two years.
- **What are the concrete student‑motivation tools?**: The product is called Time Back (finish earlier to do projects you love). Other tools include screen‑time trades (e.g., 1 hour tutor → 1 hour games) with parental buy‑in, and financial incentives where appropriate.
- **Do incentives like paying students actually work?**: Liemandt cites Roland Fryer’s work (e.g., Houston) and says paying kids—structured to build daily habits—was most effective among teacher/parent/student options.
- **What has Alpha tried in public schools?**: In MTSS level‑3 pilots (bottom ~10%), Alpha tied gift‑card unlocks to finishing lessons; teachers and parents reported the approach transformed students’ lives.
- **What about low‑income or refugee learners?**: Alpha’s learn‑and‑earn program for Ukrainian refugees used $2.50/day incentives (doubling with streaks), with 1,000+ children participating.
- **Isn’t AI in school just a cheating machine?**: Liemandt warns that open chatbots become “cheatbots” (he says 90% of students will cheat if given them). Alpha’s design avoids that paradigm and uses AI to tutor/coach rather than provide answers.
- **What’s the north‑star vision and funding plan?**: Liemandt says he has committed $1B to a full‑stack reinvention and aims for on‑device AI on sub‑$1,000 tablets to reach a billion learners over the next 20 years.
- **Any stated political/policy views tied to this?**: Lonsdale asserts New York State currently bans AI in schools and frames a national debate about whether AI will be allowed to help kids; both discuss school choice as a path for innovation. (This is reported as their on‑air statements.)
- **How does Alpha treat debate/civics?**: Students are taught to steelman both sides of debates; Liemandt recounts formative experiences arguing positions he disagreed with to build understanding.
- **What is Alpha’s “2‑hour learning” model?**: A student spends ~two hours with an AI tutor on personalized, mastery‑based academics; when complete, the interface “goes green,” and students transition to life‑skills workshops for the rest of the day.
- **What do kids do after academics?**: Workshops in leadership, teamwork, grit, entrepreneurship, financial literacy, storytelling/public speaking, and relationship-building/socialization.
- **How does Alpha handle students who are behind?**: Alpha starts with diagnostic testing (knowledge grade), then assigns targeted lessons. A full grade level is usually 20–30 hours of mastery work; three years behind ≈ ~60 hours of focused study (e.g., a third hour per day).
- **Are transcript grades reliable indicators of mastery?**: Not necessarily. Incoming “A” students often range +1 to –3 grades; “B” students –3 to –7 grades behind on Alpha’s standardized diagnostics.
- **How good can outcomes get in two hours?**: Liemandt states the engine supports top‑1% performance on standardized tests with the 2‑hour model.
- **What motivates students to do the hard work?**: The highest‑impact lever is “Time Back” (finishing academics to earn compelling afternoons). Alpha also uses lightweight incentives like “100 for 100” to catalyze mastery and change self‑perception.
- **What evidence suggests the traditional model underperforms?**: Liemandt cites data that the median U.S. high‑schooler gains about 1 point (of 300) across four years—a symptom of time‑based progression and prerequisite gaps.
- **Is Alpha only for wealthy families?**: Alpha is the high‑end model, but the team is building lower‑cost formats (e.g., sports academies, higher guide‑to‑student ratios) while preserving the academic engine.
- **What about SAT/AP‑level outcomes?**: The model aims to deliver 2–3 hours/day academics and strong results (e.g., 1550+ SAT, AP 5s) while freeing afternoons for multi‑year projects.
- **What is Timeback?**: A platform packaging the learning engine so builders can open schools or apps on top of it (Alpha afternoons are programmable). A AAA video game built on the engine is intended to be free‑to‑learn and massively scalable.
- **What exactly does “two hours” mean?**: Liemandt says students spend about two hours with an AI tutor designed on learning‑science principles; he claims they learn more than 2× as much as a traditional six‑hour school day with homework.
- **How fast is “10× faster,” and what’s different from a chatbot?**: He describes a learning‑science‑based engine that “teaches ~10× faster,” emphasizing it is “not like ChatGPT”.
- **What life skills do students actually practice?**: Liemandt lists leadership, teamwork, entrepreneurship, financial literacy, socialization/relationship‑building, storytelling/public speaking, grit; examples include post‑game press conferences and a 5th‑grade food truck for gross‑margin math.
- **How much does Alpha cost now, and what’s the plan to reduce cost?**: He states Alpha tuition is $40k–$75k; micro‑schools at ~$15k are launching, with ~$12k vouchers bringing family pay to ~$300–$400/month.
- **What’s the long‑term scale vision?**: Liemandt says the target is a sub‑$1,000 tablet that “teaches everything in two hours” for a billion kids; he says he has invested $1B to start.
- **MBA or build?**: Asked whether people should do MBAs, Liemandt answers “No,” arguing two years building is far more valuable.
- **How does Alpha teach kids about money?**: He describes financial literacy from kindergarten through high school; investing simulations and borrowing with interest to demonstrate 25% APR.

Generated timestamp: 2026-04-01 02:42:25 UTC

