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Joe Liemandt, founder of Trilogy Software and principal of Alpha School, is betting $1 billion that a two-hour AI-powered learning sprint can replace the traditional six-hour school day — and deliver top 1% academic results for every kid who goes through it. This is "AI transforming education" in action.
The data is already there. Alpha students score in the top 1–2% nationally across every subject. The average 11th grader hits 1535 on the SAT. And kids who transfer in with straight A's are routinely found to be three grade levels behind.
In this episode:
Why 90% of the learning problem is motivation — not content — and how Alpha solves it in software
How Texas Sports Academy uses Jermaine O'Neal and afternoon practice to get disengaged kids doing third-grade phonics by choice
The $200 billion federal voucher wave that could reshape who controls American education
Why chatbots are cheat bots — and what a real AI tutor actually looks like
The "100 for 100" experiment: paying kids $100 to fill academic gaps, and why it permanently changes their self-image
Joe's five-year vision: a tablet, under $1,000, that teaches everything a child needs to know in two hours a day
By Stephen McBrideJoe Liemandt, founder of Trilogy Software and principal of Alpha School, is betting $1 billion that a two-hour AI-powered learning sprint can replace the traditional six-hour school day — and deliver top 1% academic results for every kid who goes through it. This is "AI transforming education" in action.
The data is already there. Alpha students score in the top 1–2% nationally across every subject. The average 11th grader hits 1535 on the SAT. And kids who transfer in with straight A's are routinely found to be three grade levels behind.
In this episode:
Why 90% of the learning problem is motivation — not content — and how Alpha solves it in software
How Texas Sports Academy uses Jermaine O'Neal and afternoon practice to get disengaged kids doing third-grade phonics by choice
The $200 billion federal voucher wave that could reshape who controls American education
Why chatbots are cheat bots — and what a real AI tutor actually looks like
The "100 for 100" experiment: paying kids $100 to fill academic gaps, and why it permanently changes their self-image
Joe's five-year vision: a tablet, under $1,000, that teaches everything a child needs to know in two hours a day