Anonymous wrote:I totally understand why people are skeptical and the AI aspect sounds strange at first, and the price tag is definitely not something most families can take lightly. We felt the exact same way before enrolling.
For years, we fought nonstop with the public school system for support for our high functioning autistic son. We dealt with endless meetings, emails, data, diagnoses, burnout, and a child who came home exhausted, dysregulated, and miserable every single day. The emotional toll on our family was enormous. We were desperate for a different environment.
Alpha ended all of that almost immediately.
Generative AI tutors help design lessons that match each child’s exact skill level and interests. So instead of one-size-fits-all worksheets, my son gets lessons like a Minecraft-themed building challenge to learn supply and demand, or a physics lesson built around analyzing soccer free-kicks. It’s not replacing teachers, it’s a tool that gives the guides incredibly precise insight and helps them create learning experiences that actually motivate kids.
The heart of Alpha is still the human side: the guides, the coaching, the social-emotional support, and the daily connection. My child meets 1:1 with his guide every week, works through communication, writing, social skills, and growth-mindset goals, and gets daily feedback that shows they truly understand him.
As for the cost… I won’t pretend it’s not a lot. It is. But the change in my son’s anxiety, happiness, and confidence has been unbelievable. The years of fighting the school system, fearing how he’d come home, and begging for support all vanished. He loves school now which is something I never thought I’d see.
It might not be the right fit for everyone, and skepticism is valid. But for families like ours, it has been genuinely life-changing.
Anonymous wrote:I totally understand why people are skeptical and the AI aspect sounds strange at first, and the price tag is definitely not something most families can take lightly. We felt the exact same way before enrolling.
For years, we fought nonstop with the public school system for support for our high functioning autistic son. We dealt with endless meetings, emails, data, diagnoses, burnout, and a child who came home exhausted, dysregulated, and miserable every single day. The emotional toll on our family was enormous. We were desperate for a different environment.
Alpha ended all of that almost immediately.
Generative AI tutors help design lessons that match each child’s exact skill level and interests. So instead of one-size-fits-all worksheets, my son gets lessons like a Minecraft-themed building challenge to learn supply and demand, or a physics lesson built around analyzing soccer free-kicks. It’s not replacing teachers, it’s a tool that gives the guides incredibly precise insight and helps them create learning experiences that actually motivate kids.
The heart of Alpha is still the human side: the guides, the coaching, the social-emotional support, and the daily connection. My child meets 1:1 with his guide every week, works through communication, writing, social skills, and growth-mindset goals, and gets daily feedback that shows they truly understand him.
As for the cost… I won’t pretend it’s not a lot. It is. But the change in my son’s anxiety, happiness, and confidence has been unbelievable. The years of fighting the school system, fearing how he’d come home, and begging for support all vanished. He loves school now which is something I never thought I’d see.
It might not be the right fit for everyone, and skepticism is valid. But for families like ours, it has been genuinely life-changing.
Grammarly free detector gave it 40% AI Hardly cutting edge AI educationAnonymous wrote:
I ran this poster's glowing endorsement through 2 tools to see what the likelihood that it was written by an AI bot. Here's the results:
Copyleaks said the "Percentage of text that may be AI-generated: 100%"
app.gptzero.me/ : " We are highly confident this text was AI generated. Probability breakdown:
100% AI generated
0% Mixed
0% Human
Busted!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I totally understand why people are skeptical and the AI aspect sounds strange at first, and the price tag is definitely not something most families can take lightly. We felt the exact same way before enrolling.
For years, we fought nonstop with the public school system for support for our high functioning autistic son. We dealt with endless meetings, emails, data, diagnoses, burnout, and a child who came home exhausted, dysregulated, and miserable every single day. The emotional toll on our family was enormous. We were desperate for a different environment.
Alpha ended all of that almost immediately.
Generative AI tutors help design lessons that match each child’s exact skill level and interests. So instead of one-size-fits-all worksheets, my son gets lessons like a Minecraft-themed building challenge to learn supply and demand, or a physics lesson built around analyzing soccer free-kicks. It’s not replacing teachers, it’s a tool that gives the guides incredibly precise insight and helps them create learning experiences that actually motivate kids.
The heart of Alpha is still the human side: the guides, the coaching, the social-emotional support, and the daily connection. My child meets 1:1 with his guide every week, works through communication, writing, social skills, and growth-mindset goals, and gets daily feedback that shows they truly understand him.
As for the cost… I won’t pretend it’s not a lot. It is. But the change in my son’s anxiety, happiness, and confidence has been unbelievable. The years of fighting the school system, fearing how he’d come home, and begging for support all vanished. He loves school now which is something I never thought I’d see.
It might not be the right fit for everyone, and skepticism is valid. But for families like ours, it has been genuinely life-changing.
Is that a demo of AI writing? Sure does read like one. Everything correct and every cliche predictable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I totally understand why people are skeptical and the AI aspect sounds strange at first, and the price tag is definitely not something most families can take lightly. We felt the exact same way before enrolling.
For years, we fought nonstop with the public school system for support for our high functioning autistic son. We dealt with endless meetings, emails, data, diagnoses, burnout, and a child who came home exhausted, dysregulated, and miserable every single day. The emotional toll on our family was enormous. We were desperate for a different environment.
Alpha ended all of that almost immediately.
Generative AI tutors help design lessons that match each child’s exact skill level and interests. So instead of one-size-fits-all worksheets, my son gets lessons like a Minecraft-themed building challenge to learn supply and demand, or a physics lesson built around analyzing soccer free-kicks. It’s not replacing teachers, it’s a tool that gives the guides incredibly precise insight and helps them create learning experiences that actually motivate kids.
The heart of Alpha is still the human side: the guides, the coaching, the social-emotional support, and the daily connection. My child meets 1:1 with his guide every week, works through communication, writing, social skills, and growth-mindset goals, and gets daily feedback that shows they truly understand him.
As for the cost… I won’t pretend it’s not a lot. It is. But the change in my son’s anxiety, happiness, and confidence has been unbelievable. The years of fighting the school system, fearing how he’d come home, and begging for support all vanished. He loves school now which is something I never thought I’d see.
It might not be the right fit for everyone, and skepticism is valid. But for families like ours, it has been genuinely life-changing.
Is that a demo of AI writing? Sure does read like one. Everything correct and every cliche predictable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like this is classical education wrapped up in AI for more educated parents. I’d run far away. These classical education people are everywhere now and absolute nuts.
Yep this
The heritage foundation education for idiots
Anonymous wrote:I totally understand why people are skeptical and the AI aspect sounds strange at first, and the price tag is definitely not something most families can take lightly. We felt the exact same way before enrolling.
For years, we fought nonstop with the public school system for support for our high functioning autistic son. We dealt with endless meetings, emails, data, diagnoses, burnout, and a child who came home exhausted, dysregulated, and miserable every single day. The emotional toll on our family was enormous. We were desperate for a different environment.
Alpha ended all of that almost immediately.
Generative AI tutors help design lessons that match each child’s exact skill level and interests. So instead of one-size-fits-all worksheets, my son gets lessons like a Minecraft-themed building challenge to learn supply and demand, or a physics lesson built around analyzing soccer free-kicks. It’s not replacing teachers, it’s a tool that gives the guides incredibly precise insight and helps them create learning experiences that actually motivate kids.
The heart of Alpha is still the human side: the guides, the coaching, the social-emotional support, and the daily connection. My child meets 1:1 with his guide every week, works through communication, writing, social skills, and growth-mindset goals, and gets daily feedback that shows they truly understand him.
As for the cost… I won’t pretend it’s not a lot. It is. But the change in my son’s anxiety, happiness, and confidence has been unbelievable. The years of fighting the school system, fearing how he’d come home, and begging for support all vanished. He loves school now which is something I never thought I’d see.
It might not be the right fit for everyone, and skepticism is valid. But for families like ours, it has been genuinely life-changing.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like this is classical education wrapped up in AI for more educated parents. I’d run far away. These classical education people are everywhere now and absolute nuts.
Anonymous wrote:Why is this so expensive if the instructional time is so limited, they don’t hire real teachers, and have none of the extracurriculars that a regular school would have?