This is an important article about the Silicon Valley billionaires who want to remake America’s schools, although none has any deep knowledge of children or cognition or the multiple social issues that affect children and families. Being tech entrepreneurs, most of them think there is a technological fix for every problem.
The article focuses on several billionaires and what they aim to achieve.
The writer, Natasha Singer, is careful to add red flags where necessary and seek out evaluations. She also is alert to the possibility that the tech entrepreneurs are building their portfolios and enriching themselves. And she points out that much of what they are doing challenges democracy itself in the absence of public debate and understanding.
She writes:
“In the space of just a few years, technology giants have begun remaking the very nature of schooling on a vast scale, using some of the same techniques that have made their companies linchpins of the American economy. Through their philanthropy, they are influencing the subjects that schools teach, the classroom tools that teachers choose and fundamental approaches to learning….
“The involvement by some of the wealthiest and most influential titans of the 21st century amounts to a singular experiment in education, with millions of students serving as de facto beta testers for their ideas. Some tech leaders believe that applying an engineering mind-set can improve just about any system, and that their business acumen qualifies them to rethink American education…
“Tech companies and their founders have been rolling out programs in America’s public schools with relatively few checks and balances, The New York Times found in interviews with more than 100 company executives, government officials, school administrators, researchers, teachers, parents and students.
“They have the power to change policy, but no corresponding check on that power,” said Megan Tompkins-Stange, an assistant professor of public policy at the University of Michigan. “It does subvert the democratic process.”
Furthermore, there is only limited research into whether the tech giants’ programs have actually improved students’ educational results….
“Mr. Hastings of Netflix and other tech executives rejected the idea that they wielded significant influence in education. The mere fact that classroom internet access has improved, Mr. Hastings said, has had a much greater impact in schools than anything tech philanthropists have done.”
Hastings’ Dreambox software depends on constant data-mining:
“DreamBox Learning tracks a student’s every click, correct answer, hesitation and error — collecting about 50,000 data points per student per hour — and uses those details to adjust the math lessons it shows. And it uses data to help teachers pinpoint which math concepts students may be struggling with.”
This is the same Reed Hastings who just spent $5 million helping charter entrepreneurs gain control of the Los Angeles school board.
“Another difference: Some tech moguls are taking a hands-on role in nearly every step of the education supply chain by financing campaigns to alter policy, building learning apps to advance their aims and subsidizing teacher training. This end-to-end influence represents an “almost monopolistic approach to education reform,” said Larry Cuban, an emeritus professor of education at Stanford University. “That is starkly different to earlier generations of philanthropists.”
“These efforts coincide with a larger Silicon Valley push to sell computers and software to American schools, a lucrative market projected to reach $21 billion by 2020. Already, more than half of the primary- and secondary-school students in the United States use Google services like Gmail in school.”
Singer goes through each of the entrepreneurs’ programs. The only one that impressed me was the program in San Francisco that created a Pricipals’ Innovation Fund, “which awards annual unrestricted grants of $100,000 to the principal at each of the district’s 21 middle and K-8 schools.” The key word here is unrestricted.
Mark Zuckerberg’s dream is to sell his digitized approach to enable children to learn via computer and use teachers as moderators. He calls this “personalized learning,” since the computer algorithm adjusts for each student. Singer’s subtitle for Zuckerberg’s dream is: “Student, Teach Thyself.”
““Our hope over the next decade is to help upgrade a majority of these schools to personalized learning and then start working globally as well,” Mr. Zuckerberg told the audience. “Giving a billion students a personalized education is a great thing to do.”
Please, Natasha Singer, do a follow-up that explains that learning from a machine is depersonalized learning.

“In the space of just a few years, technology giants have begun remaking the very nature of schooling on a vast scale…” I keep seeing chaotic educational change coming at an insanely rapid speed, and yet find so few citizens who think that what is happening is even possible.
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A locally-elected school board might look out for the taxpayers, the kids and the community. But, to counter any concern they might show for citizens’ interests, state governments (bought by tech moguls), will foist the scam on the poor and dwindling middle class.
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No mention of Bill Gates, Pearson and Zuckerberg’s investment in for-profit, schools-in-a-box?
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I do not view technology as a panacea for education. I am no Luddite, but I fear that much of Edu Tech is made not to be used but to be sold.
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Money = Power
“Power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely.”
“And remember, where you have a concentration of power in a few hands, all too frequently men with the mentality of gangsters (Trump, etc.) get control. History has proven that.”
Lord Action (1834 – 1902)
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And Zuckerberg sounds interested in running for president…
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The apocalypse better hurry up and spare us from a President Suckerberg.
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Sandberg recommended Zuckerberg explore his political interest with the Center for American Progress. CAP is a liability to the Democratic Party and American democracy.
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It’s irrelevant whether any of the tech stuff “improves educational results”, whatever that means.
The only relevant thing is that people like Gates and Zuckerberg subvert democracy.
They are basically dictators who stage coups with monetary as opposed to military might.
Their actions amount to sedition.
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Cros posted the article itself at
https://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/The-Silicon-Valley-Billion-in-Best_Web_OpEds-American-Education_Education_Fraud_Issues-170606-580.html#comment661926
with this comment form this blog.
https://monthlyreview.org/2017/04/01/who-is-behind-the-assault-on-public-schools/
Howard Ryan, writing in Monthly Review, analyzes the sources of support for corporate reform and privatization. You will find it interesting to see how he weaves together the various strands of the corporate reform movement. Ryan writes:
“Over the past three decades, public schools have been the target of a systematic assault and takeover by corporations and private foundations. The endeavor is called “school reform” by its advocates, while critics call it corporate school reform. Finnish educator Pasi Sahlberg has given it the vivid acronym GERM–the global education reform movement. Its basic features are familiar: high-stakes testing; standardized curricula; privatization; and deskilled, high-turnover faculty. In the United States, public schools have become increasingly segregated, destabilized, and defunded, with the hardest hit in low-income communities of color.
“Nevertheless, while the political conflicts and social ramifications of the school reform phenomenon are well known, basic questions about the movement remain underexamined. Who really leads it? What are their aims and motives? After briefly taking up the statements of the reformers themselves, I will turn to the views of their progressive opponents, and offer a critique of three influential interpretations of the school reform movement. Finally, I will present my own theory about this movement, its drivers, and its underlying aims”
“A large body of research, however, challenges the merits of high-stakes testing and other elements of the corporate school reform package. It is also at least questionable whether the reformers really believe their own statements.
“The reformers’ interest in school improvement appears, in a number of ways, to be less than genuine, to mask a different agenda. They prescribe models for mass education that they do not consider suitable for their own children. They sponsor think tanks to produce “junk research” praising their models, while ignoring studies that contradict their models. They insist that full resourcing of schools is unimportant or unrealistic, and that “great teachers” will succeed regardless of school conditions, class size, or professional training.”
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Just imagine, some day rather than having to actually interact with the annoying little brats we will be able to plug them into virtue reality school and retreat into our own virtual reality lives. Hey! Maybe not such a bad idea. We can all pretend to go to work. Heck! We could even have pretend children! The possibilities for personalized living are endless. Who needs reality? It is obviously overrated.
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“Who needs reality? It is obviously overrated.”
Exactly, and in a prime example of the snake eating its own tail, while the monopolistic power of tech robber barons continues to degrade reality, the monopolists themselves spend much of their time on schemes for immortality (Peter Thiel and his youthful blood donors, etc.) and space travel (Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos), hoping to cavort in their gated communities on Mars while data mining the rest of us losers…
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If people like Musk, Gates, Thiel, Sorros, Koch, Zuckerberg, etc all rocketed off together in a spaceship to Mars (or even better, beyond) it would be an extremely good thing for humans and the other creatures living on planet earth.
A kind of inverse lifeboat situation with earth being the lifeboat.
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While these creeps are obviously deluded about their extra-terrestrial colonies, and while I’d love nothing more than to ship them all into deep space, it’s indicative of their moral nullity that they’re willing to devote immense sums to despoiling the earth, prey on the loneliness, vanity and vulnerability of people, and then plan to escape the hell they’ve contributed so much to creating.
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I’m just asking that there be SOME skepticism about this.
This is how this works- they make the customer dependent on the “free!” product and then they offer a (much) better “premium” product that costs.
This is just ordinary marketing and sales. There’s nothing particularly “innovative” about it.
There’s no reason to treat “tech giants” any different than any other corporate giant. This idea that this is somehow a noble mission and none of these people are all at self-interested is just nonsense.
They are pushing this SO HARD that the idea that it’s somehow “experimental” is silly. By the time they push this into every public school every public school will be so invested in it they won’t be able to get out without huge losses.
Ed reformers are wrong. Public schools aren’t “start ups”. They can’t take on risk like private entities. If a public school bets the farm on these experiments that public school will get hurt if the experiment fails, not least of which they’ll have to answer to the public who will wonder why they were treating public funds like they were at a casino table.
The Obama Administration went to such ludicrous lengths to bend over backwards for these people that they were pushing specific tech product on the US Dept of Ed website. They shouldn’t be doing that! They’re not salespeople for these companies!
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As the axiom states, when an online product is “free,” you’re not the customer, you’re the product being sold.
Kids are data, and data is for sale.
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I don’t know why a public school would buy anything Reed Hastings was selling anyway. He spends all his time working to eradicate public schools. You’re all going to take his advice on tech product?
At least choose a vendor who doesn’t want to destroy the whole notion of “public education”. At least demand that these people treat public schools like customers. If we’re all planning on spending billions of public school funding on tech product at least find a seller who doesn’t actively work against your school.
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Is anyone asking kids if they want this stuff? They’re not nearly as impressed with it as adults are. You know what’s popular right now among my son’s friends? Board games. They’re all dragging out banged-up board games.
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I have a Masters in Math education K-12 and a Masters in Mathematical Statistics and have taught High School Math and Computer programming for 42 years.
i recall the worst Math class that I took in 12th grade(pre-computer days). It was called 12x and based on BF Skinner’s immediate reward. It was dreadful! You would read information and then do practice problems that gave you the answers. If you got a wrong answer the pamphlet would tell you to go back to a certain page and repeat the exercise. Not only was it boring, it took you 4 times as long to learn the material.
Recently, in my retirement, I took a free online course on partial derivatives. I had studied partial derivatives but was curious about the (free) online college course. It was the pits, thank goodness I didn’t pay for it!
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Read the article in today’s WSJ lamenting college’s failure at teaching critical thinking. What did the WSJ expect? They have supported deform for public schools for years and years. Now we see the result. As one prof who designed a solve-the-problem curriculum said, the students demanded she just tell them the answer.
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The best researched-based math computer program I found on the internet was actually free! It also required critical analysis rather than skill-drill and kill or the kid-preferred games of the same skill-drill for which the school paid.
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You don’t teach critical thinking by teaching critical thinking! That’s the big mistake we’re making. Teach knowledge and the scope of our in-born critical thinking faculties expands! We’ve got it all wrong. Employers and college professors make a huge (but understandable) mistake when they lament “lack of critical thinking” in HS grads. What they mean, though, is that grads lack critical thinking ability about certain topics. If K-12 taught about those topics, kids would think well about them!
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Nothing on the internet is free. For that math program, you are paying with your students’ data, which are likely pieces of personal identifiable information (PII). In other words, your students are paying for the math program with their futures.
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I love the quote from Zuckerberg where he says his robo-teachers allow teachers to do what they do best –“mentoring”. Huh? How does he know that’s what I do best? I love how he presumes that human teachers stink at actual teaching.
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Zuckerberg’s teacher-bots will undoubtedly teach students how to steal other people’s ideas and work, cuz that’s obviously what he knows best.
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If Zuckerberg and Chan think it’s all so wonderful why aren’t they sending their kids to private schools that use all this.
Why aren’t they even TRYING to give it to private schools that teach the scions of the rich in Silicon Valley? Because they know their rich friends and the overpaid executives they hire would no longer pay $50,000 a year per child for the great and wonderful “privilege” of putting their kids into schools with this “kids teach themselves” curriculum?
And just think all the board members of those rich private schools are NOT fighting to get this supposedly superior education for their kids?
I can’t even believe that we are supposed to believe that rich people would forego this wonderful opportunity for their children and yet believe them when they insist that it is the greatest thing for other peoples children. And by “other people” I mean poor.
The logical question is why aren’t these billionaire advocating the kinds of schools for other people’s children that all their rich friends use for theirs?
But since the education reporters seem to have lost their ability to question the absurdity of these “reforms”, I guess these billionaires will never be asked these questions.
Let them run a pilot program on THEIR children’s education before foisting it on ours.
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Being a billionaire is a DISEASE.
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Can you tell me where I might contract it?
Or at least the milder ” millionaire” case of it?
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So much money, so little acumen….
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As a teacher who was interviewed for this article, and to answer Diane’s question, Natasha Singer has been interviewing the teachers leaving the Summit charter chain. Originally, Summit Charter was a teacher led consensus-based community school with many well-trained teachers who had studied under Linda Darling Hammond at Stanford. The school became more famous and was eventually taken over and corporatized by a top-down educational model where teachers and families had less voice, and certain students were counseled out of attending, at the same time that new schools within the chain were founded. There has been a large exodus of passionate and experiences teachers who have been replaced by newer and lesser qualified teachers, including TFA recruits. The high teacher turnover is constant. I hope that Mark Zuckerberg investigates why teachers do not wish to teach there.
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High teacher turnover is a feature, not a bug, of the so-called reform model. After all, why should teaching be any more than just another gig?
As with Uber drivers, who (according to the apparent plans of the company) are nothing more than exploited placeholders until driverless cars can be put to work, eliminating humans altogether, the presence of human teachers in the classroom is seen as a inconvenient necessity until they can be “innovated” away.
As for Zuckerberg, I imagine he’d be pleased with high turnover among the temp “mentors” in his digital sweatshops. Isn’t that the employment model everywhere else?
The “tell” regarding Zuckerberg and Chan is that their so-called philanthropy is a for-profit, limited liability corporation.
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Michael, don’t you think we’re giving them the rope to hang us with by consenting to the guide-at-the-side model? Denigrating lecture has been ed school boilerplate for a long time, but it seems to be getting ramped up lately. Every time my colleagues go to a training on how to teach the new standards (Common Core, NGSS, the new history frameworks) their takeaway always seems to be “less teacher talk”. This gospel fits perfectly with Zuckerberg’s teacherless-classroom agenda. Teachers –it’s time to start making a full-throated defense of teacher talk! My favorite education memories are all about LISTENING to good teacher talk. I view my main job as a teacher as crafting lucid talks. This is what teaching is about, pace Paolo Freire, Zuckerberg and many others.
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Ponderosa,
While as a student I loathed group work, and as a teacher think it’s highly overrated, I try not to lecture either (though I agree that it is unfairly denigrated), but instead mostly use guided reading (I’m an ESL and English teacher) and guided questioning, as my default style of teaching. That said, I’m convinced that so-called reformers and their Overclass patrons want to minimize the human presence in the classroom (to say nothing of the presence of experienced, unionized teachers), whatever form it takes.
Whatever our teaching styles and methods, the so-called reformers were given the rope to hang us when we didn’t laugh in their faces and throw them out the window decades ago.
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America today is suffering from an epidemic of “The Billionaires’ Disease,” and this disease has brought paralysis to our government, decline to our industries, and ruin to our schools. Most billionaires are delusional. They have accumulated great wealth and all the things that go with it, such as being surrounded by sycophants who assure them that they are geniuses at everything. In fact, most billionaires not only believe themselves to be geniuses at everything, but believe that they alone are responsible for the wealth they have accumulated; they rationalize away the key and essential roles played by others in the success of their businesses. In their delusion they also think that their self-identified genius can be applied to other areas, such as government and public education, regardless of the fact that they have no experience or expertise in these areas. So what we have today are billionaires with no governmental experience who think they know best who our elected officials should be and what government should or shouldn’t do, and of course they say that what the government shouldn’t do is make corporations pay a fair share of taxes. And there are billionaires who never taught a classroom full of children but who think they know exactly what “reforms” are needed in public education. And, of course, what’s needed is the charter school business model that bleeds tax money from genuine public schools and puts public taxpayer money into the pockets of private charter school operators who don’t file the same reports that true public schools file to tell taxpayers just where their tax money is actually going. And of course there are plenty of simpering sycophants who tell the billionaires how insightful they are because these sycophants see an opportunity to cash in on unregulated charter schools to bleed tax money away from children and into their own pockets. If only there was a cure for The Billionaires’ Disease, perhaps the billionaires could turn their resources to combating the true root causes of problems not only in schools but throughout our society: Poverty and racial discrimination.
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Unfortunately, the article made no mention of the issue of student data privacy. These computer programs collect millions of data points per child without parental consent. The article made no mention that this is even being done and is one of the reasons the tech industry has invested millions in this endeavor.
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My 3rd graders with special needs will move into the 4th-5th grade class where they will be on a laptop most of the day. On the one hand, they all love computer, but on the other hand they also require direct instruction. Such a dilemma!
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Truly frightening! As a middle school mathematics teacher whose students have their own school-issued chrome books with g-mail accounts, this article sheds new light on the behind the story story. This year for the first time students wrote end-of-the-reflections commenting on how much they appreciated the collaborative hands-on math tasks since they were not on their computers. Technology that replaces face to face live person to person interactions is dangerous to humanity.
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