Emily Talmage describes her years as a beginning teacher: only 22, having no background in education, she was assigned to teach severely disabled students.

Now she sees a movement to put these kinds of children in front of computers and let them practice their skills online, with digital, game-based avatars. The bottom line, as it so often is, is profits…

“There really are people out there – powerful, absurdly wealthy people – who think that the best way to help hurting kids like A.J. is to isolate them on a computer, ask them to choose “thought options” from a drop-down menu, and then to collect data on their “growth.”

“Ultimately, the goal is to monetize the “evidence” they’ve gathered….

“A.J., and millions of kids like him, don’t need digital avatars. They don’t need drop-down thought-menus to choose from while they are plugged in, alone, to an electronic device. And they don’t need data-wells built on their backs that are designed to make the rich even richer.

“What they need is grown-ups – like us – to demand that the exploitation stops.”