Anonymous wrote:How do investors in for-profit education make $$?
Anonymous wrote:Private equity firms only want to make money. They are profit driven and not mission driven. Therefore, the whole business model will eventually collapse because schools are mission driven to educate students and prepare them for the future and not make money for investors. Any parents that waste money on this school are harming their children and feeding the PE firms and their investors.
Anonymous wrote:Whittle was behind Channel 1 in the early 90s. Free TV as long as you watched the advertisements.
What a POS.
School will be gone in less than five years.
Anonymous wrote:Can it be challenged? Is there no public reporting period prior to approval?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The for-profit part is crazy!
Why is this crazy? How does for profit hurt you?
How does for profit benefit the students?
From the article:
In truth, Whittle has never had much to say about the things most people talk about when the subject is schools: teaching methods, subject areas, the mysterious working of children’s minds. “He promotes education reform but can’t name a single reformer,” a journalist noted in 1990, and this still seems more or less true. In a conversation that lasts an hour and three quarters, not one education thinker comes up. Prospective parents, staring at a $40,000-plus tuition and thumbing through the sumptuous catalog, with its 30 pages on “The Team and Extended Family”—dazzling re?sume?s, studio-quality headshots—won’t find much of an answer to one obvious question: What will my kid be learning?
Anonymous wrote:[url]https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.townandcountrymag.com/society/money-and-power/amp22084801/chris-whittle-to-launch-global-academy-whittle-school-and-studios/
A friend forwarded this to us - not the most flattering look behind the scenes of this organization![]()