$40K+ AI private schools are popping up around the U.S. - Axios Charlotte

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Aug 27, 2025 - News

AI-driven private schools are popping up around the U.S., from North Carolina to Florida

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Children wearing blue headphones working on laptops at tables in a bright classroom with colorful water bottles, a teacher kneeling to assist, and shelves with supplies in the background.

Courtesy of Alpha Schools

An AI-driven private school that teaches core subjects for just two hours a day is nearly doubling its U.S. footprint, adding eight new campuses from California to North Carolina to Puerto Rico.

Why it matters: With tuition starting at $40,000, Alpha Schools is riding the parental school choice movement while embracing the technology that will shape kids' futures — a challenge public schools are grappling with.

How it works: In Alpha Schools, students spend no more than two hours on core academics, then devote the rest of the day to developing life skills.

What they're saying: "If a kid comes to us and is behind,we're able to help catch them up," Price says. "If a kid comes to us who's been bored in traditional school because they're more advanced, they're able to really take the ceiling off."

The other side: Skeptics have questioned the effectiveness of replacing teachers with AI and restricting learning to 25 minutes per subject.

Zoom out: Alpha applied to open a public-school charter network in multiple states, but state boards in Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah, Arkansas and North Carolina rejected the idea, the New York Times reported.

Case in point: Raleigh parent Jesse Miele — who calls the current education system a "death trap" — is considering enrolling his 8- and 4-year-old in Raleigh's new Alpha School. He says his children's private Christian school has failed to embrace technology.

The big picture: Alpha School, which avoids political and social issues, is gaining more national attention, boosted by the support of billionaire Bill Ackman, an outspoken critic of DEI.

What's next: Alpha will launch this fall in Santa Barbara, Calif.; New York City; Chantilly, Va.; and Raleigh and Charlotte, N.C.; before expanding to Houston, Tampa and Puerto Rico.

The bottom line: "I would love to be able to bring this model of education to more and more people and make it more accessible," Price says. She says she hopes the public system "will embrace this idea."

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