Alpha School, an “AI-powered private school” that heavily relies on AI to teach students and can cost up to $65,000 a year, is AI-generating faulty lesson plans that internal company documentation find sometimes do “more harm than good,” and scraping data from a variety of other online courses without permission to train its own AI, according to former Alpha School employees and internal company documents.
Alpha School has earned fawning coverage from Fox News and The New York Times and received praise from Linda McMahon, the Trump-appointed Secretary of Education, for using generative AI to chart the future of education. But samples of poorly constructed AI-generated lessons that I have viewed present students with unclear wording and illogical choices in multiple choice questions.
“These questions not only fail to meet SAT standards but also fall short of the quality we promise to deliver,” one employee wrote in the company’s Workflowy, a company-wide note taking app where every employee can see what other employees are working on, including their progress and thoughts on various projects. “From a student’s perspective, when answer options don’t logically fit the question, it feels like a betrayal of their effort to learn and succeed. How can we expect students to trust our assessments when the very questions meant to test their knowledge are flawed?”
💡 Do you know anything else about Alpha School or AI use in education? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal @emanuel.404. Otherwise, send me an email at [email protected].
My investigation into Alpha School also reveals that the massive amounts of data the company collects on students, including videos of them, is stored in a Google Drive folder that anyone with the link—even if they’ve left the company, or if it was sent to them—could access. In turn, that sensitive material is viewed by more Alpha School employees than students and parents may realize.
Former Alpha School employees told me that the company’s increasing reliance on generative AI in every aspect of its operation, as well as the constant monitoring and tracking of every student’s mouse movements, is making students anxious and does not always provide the quality of education Alpha School advertises to parents.
This investigation provides previously unreported details about how Alpha School builds and uses AI tools and how they fail students in a time when the entire education system is struggling to adopt and adapt to generative AI.
“Students are being treated like guinea pigs,” one former Alpha School employee told me. 404 Media granted the three Alpha School employees we talked to anonymity because they signed non-disclosure agreements with the company.
“We are not computers or algorithms. We are simply people who need breaks. We are people that don't like being watched through their computers,” one Alpha School student wrote in a feedback form to the company.
The “2 Hour Learning” Pitch
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