The newest online-only school greenlighted by the Arizona State Board for Charter Schools comes with a twist: the academic curriculum will be taught entirely by AI.
Charter schools — independently operated but publicly-funded — typically get greater autonomy compared to traditional public schools when it comes to how subjects are taught. But Unbound Academy’s application, which proposes an “AI-driven adaptive learning technology” that “condenses academic instruction into a two-hour window,” is a first for the model. (Unbound’s founders have been running a similar program at a “high-end private school” in Texas, which appears to be in-person.)
Unbound’s approach leans on ed-tech platforms like IXL and Khan Academy, and students engage with “interactive, AI-powered platforms that continuously adjust to their individual learning pace and style.” There will be humans, just fewer of them, and maybe not actual accredited teachers: it will adopt a “human-in-the-loop” approach with “skilled guides” monitoring progress who can provide “targeted interventions” and coaching for each student.
Academic instruction is whittled down to just two hours. The remainder of the students’ day will include “life-skills workshops” covering areas such as critical thinking, creative problem-solving, financial literacy, public-speaking, goal-setting, and entrepreneurship. The online-only school targets students from fourth to eighth grades.