In a bold move that blends Silicon Valley disruption with K-12 education, a private school chain called Alpha is rolling out a futuristic model across the U.S.—one where AI bots deliver core academic lessons, human “guides” replace traditional teachers, and the school day is condensed to just two hours of tablet-based learning.
Founded in Austin, Texas in 2014, Alpha has been expanding rapidly. Last fall, it opened a campus in Manhattan’s Financial District, following summer launches in San Francisco, Santa Barbara, and Lake Forest, California. With additional locations in Miami, Scottsdale, and Charlotte, the school is positioning itself at the forefront of an educational revolution—one that comes with a steep price tag of up to $65,000 a year in tuition.
Inside an Alpha classroom, students spend two hours each day on language, math, science, and history, clicking through personalized AI-driven lessons on devices. Human “guides” circulate to assist, but they are not lecturers. The remainder of the day is dedicated to “life skill workshops,” which can range from rock climbing and assembling IKEA furniture to solving Rubik’s Cubes or launching entrepreneurial ventures.
Leading the charge is MacKenzie Price, a Stanford-educated entrepreneur with over 1 million Instagram followers. Price speaks in the lexicon of tech disruption, arguing that traditional schools have “poisoned” young minds. She promotes a “growth mindset” and student-led accountability, declaring in one post, “Report cards are basically useless at this point.”
Alpha has attracted high-profile admirers, including billionaire investor Bill Ackman, who encouraged his followers on X to enroll, calling Alpha a “truly breakthrough innovation.” Price has also appeared on LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman’s podcast, further cementing her ties to tech elite circles.
However, the model has drawn significant concern from educators and mental health professionals. Critics warn that replacing human teachers with screens could jeopardize children’s social and emotional development.
“I believe it’s dangerous to wipe teachers from classrooms,” said Joe Vercellino, a Detroit Teacher of the Year and founder of The Lion Heart Experience. “What I worry about is what it will take away from our human development.”
Doctors and psychologists echo these worries, noting that excessive screen time and reduced human interaction can increase risks of anxiety, depression, and low self-esteem in young people.
Price counters that Alpha isn’t removing teachers but “transforming” them. “Teachers aren’t going to be replaced, they’re going to be transformed, and it’s such an exciting time for them,” she told The Post.
On her social media, Alpha students showcase unusual achievements: a 10-year-old managing Airbnb properties, a teenager founding an app. These anecdotes fuel Price’s argument that Alpha cultivates real-world readiness.
Yet, as this tech-infused model scales, fundamental questions remain. Can AI truly replicate the mentorship, adaptability, and emotional support of a human teacher? Is condensing academics into two hours of screen-based learning sufficient for deep understanding? And at $65,000 a year, is this “future of education” only accessible to the elite?
Alpha School represents a radical experiment at the intersection of education, technology, and culture. Its growth suggests a market among parents disillusioned with traditional schooling—but whether it represents a sustainable, equitable, and psychologically sound future for learning is a debate that’s just beginning.

