Wednesday, June 10, 2026

HOW BILLIONAIRES BROKE AMERICAN SCHOOLS — AND ARE NOW SELLING YOU THE REPAIR KIT

HOW BILLIONAIRES BROKE AMERICAN SCHOOLS 

AND ARE NOW SELLING YOU THE REPAIR KIT


A data-driven autopsy of the greatest self-inflicted wound in American educational history

"We can clearly see that this isn't just a pandemic story."Matthew Soldner, Acting Commissioner, National Center for Education Statistics

Let's get one thing straight before we dive in: the story you've been sold about American kids falling behind because of COVID-19 is, to put it charitably, a convenient lie. The pandemic didn't cause the education crisis. It was the mudslide that followed thirteen years of billionaire-engineered erosion — a slow-motion demolition job so thorough, so methodical, and so profitable that you almost have to admire the audacity. Almost. The data is in, the receipts are public, and the architects of this disaster are now — with breathtaking nerve — offering to sell you the solution. For a low monthly subscription fee, of course.

PART ONE: HOW YOU DEMOLISH A PUBLIC INSTITUTION AND CALL IT "REFORM"

To understand the crime, you need to understand the con. Starting around the year 2000, a small, extraordinarily wealthy cadre of billionaires decided that American public education was, essentially, a failing startup that needed disruption. Never mind that these same individuals largely attended elite private schools, or that a surprising number of them never finished college. That's fine. You don't need expertise when you have a checkbook the size of a small nation's GDP.

The "Big Three" foundations — the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation, and the Walton Family Foundation — became the unholy trinity of what historians will one day call Vulture Philanthropy: the art of giving money away in ways that happen to reshape entire public systems to your ideological preferences while generating enormous goodwill press coverage.

Their toolkit was elegant in its destructiveness:

  • Charter School Explosion — Pour hundreds of millions into non-unionized Charter Management Organizations like KIPP and Success Academy. Frame it as "choice." Watch neighborhood schools bleed enrollment and funding until they "fail," then close them. Repeat.
  • High-Stakes Testing & Common Core — The Gates Foundation spent over $280 million single-handedly bankrolling Common Core, then used Obama's Race to the Top program to force states to adopt it by dangling federal dollars. Nothing says "local control" like a billionaire in Seattle redesigning the curriculum for a kid in rural Mississippi.
  • Value-Added Teacher Evaluations — Evaluate teachers by their students' test scores. Fire the ones whose kids score low. Ignore poverty, trauma, and the fact that over 60% of test score variance is causally linked to out-of-school factors like family income — a finding confirmed by a 2024 peer-reviewed study. But why let science interfere with a good narrative?
  • The Urban Portfolio Model — Deploy Broad-trained superintendents to major cities. Run school systems like hedge funds. Close "underperforming" schools. Gentrify the rubble.

The result? By 2013 — seven years before anyone heard of COVID-19 — student achievement stopped growing entirely. Reading scores didn't just flatten; they turned negative. Math gains evaporated. And the architects of this disaster? They pivoted to their next initiative.

PART TWO: THE DATA THEY DON'T WANT YOU TO READ

The Harvard/Stanford/Dartmouth Education Scorecard report is the kind of document that should have triggered congressional hearings, front-page headlines, and perhaps a few very uncomfortable TED Talks. Instead, it was largely buried under the more politically convenient "pandemic blame" narrative.

Here is what the data actually shows:

PeriodWhat Happened
1990–2013Steady gains — students absorbed ~2 full grade levels of math knowledge
2013The turning point. Progress stops. Reading goes negative.
2013–2019Pre-pandemic slide — reading falls just as sharply as during COVID
2020–2022Pandemic accelerates existing collapse
2022–2026Partial math recovery in some districts; 8th-grade reading at lowest since 1990

As of today, math scores remain down in 70% of school districts and reading scores are down in 83% compared to a decade ago. The latest federal data released this very week confirms that 13-year-olds' scores in both reading and math remain below pre-pandemic averages — and their reading scores are essentially at 1971 levels. Half a century of progress, erased.

Harvard's Tom Kane put it plainly: "The pandemic was the mudslide that followed seven years of erosion."

And what caused that erosion? The Scorecard points to two simultaneous structural catastrophes:

  1. The Dismantling of Accountability — When No Child Left Behind was replaced by the toothless Every Student Succeeds Act, the federal government effectively turned off the smoke alarms. States stopped being held accountable. Instructional pressure evaporated.

  2. The Smartphone/Social Media Explosion — The academic slide mirrors exactly the window when smartphones colonized childhood. Chronic sleep disruption, collapsed recreational reading habits, and hours of evening screen time have disproportionately devastated lower-achieving students.

Two causes. One catastrophic outcome. And the billionaires who dismantled the accountability systems? They're not in the dock. They're on stage at Davos.

PART THREE: THE AUDACITY OF THE SUBSCRIPTION MODEL

Here is where the story goes from tragedy to farce.

Having spent 25 years systematically dismantling public education's infrastructure — closing neighborhood schools, deskilling teachers, replacing human relationships with test-prep regimens, and redirecting public funds into private pockets — the same Silicon Valley philanthropist class has now identified the next great business opportunity: fixing the damage they caused.

For a monthly fee.

The Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, Laurene Powell Jobs' XQ Super School Project, and the Gates Foundation are now heavily pushing AI-driven "personalized learning" — algorithmic tutoring platforms, competency-based digital pathways, and subscription-based curriculum ecosystems. Companies like Coursera, Pearson+, and Canvas have built locked subscription ecosystems that eliminate the old economy of reselling textbooks and create permanent, recurring revenue dependency.

The pitch is seductive: AI will "supercharge" teachers! What this means in practice, critics note, is that teachers are increasingly reduced to what one observer acidly called "emotional support humans" while the algorithm handles the actual instruction — and the tech company handles the billing.

Meanwhile, the DeVos family, the Walton network, and libertarian foundations like Bradley and Koch have been pushing universal Education Savings Accounts (ESAs) and private school vouchers with evangelical fervor. The sales pitch: "Save poor kids from failing schools!"

The reality, per 2024–2026 data: 70–80% of universal voucher applicants were already enrolled in private schools. The program is, functionally, a state-subsidized tuition discount for wealthy families — paid for by the same public school budgets that were already being starved.

This is not reform. This is a protection racket with a nonprofit tax status.

PART FOUR: DR. P.L. THOMAS SAYS — READ THE DATA WITH YOUR EYES OPEN

Furman University Professor of Education P.L. Thomas — 2013 NCTE George Orwell Award winner and one of the sharpest independent voices in American education commentary — issued a pointed warning this week about the newly released Kids Count 2026 report. His message: good intentions are not enough when the data is being misused.

Thomas's cautions are surgical:

  • The report relies heavily on NAEP test scores, despite a 2024 study confirming that over 62% of test score variance is explained by out-of-school factors like family income — factors schools cannot control.
  • The report focuses on Grade 4 reading scores, which are far less statistically valid than Grade 8 scores, and are more susceptible to short-term instructional gaming.
  • The report emphasizes "proficiency" levels on NAEP — a benchmark set at the 70th percentile, well above grade level — creating a manufactured crisis narrative that misrepresents actual student performance.
  • The report excludes DoDEA schools (Department of Defense Education Activity), which consistently outperform civilian public schools — not because of magic curriculum, but because of stable funding, housing security, and insulation from the political chaos of "reform."

Thomas invokes Paul Gorski's warning with precision: when well-intentioned reports use flawed data frameworks, they end up "doing the bidding of the powerful" — inadvertently providing ammunition for the very privatization agenda they may oppose.

In other words: if you misread the smoke signals, you'll keep calling the arsonist a firefighter.

PART FIVE: THE ROGUES' GALLERY — A BRIEF CHARACTER STUDY

Let's pause and appreciate the sheer chutzpah of the cast of characters who have shaped this 26-year saga:

Bill Gates — Dropped out of Harvard. Spent $280 million on Common Core. Declared it a failure. Pivoted to AI tutoring. Net worth: $130+ billion. Teaching experience: zero.

Mark Zuckerberg — Dropped out of Harvard. Donated $100 million to Newark schools in 2010. By most accounts, the money largely funded consultants. Now running the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative's AI education push. Teaching experience: zero.

Betsy DeVos — Attended private Christian school. Never attended public school. Never sent her children to public school. Served as U.S. Secretary of Education. Spent decades dismantling the public system she never used. Teaching experience: zero.

Eli Broad — Built a real estate and insurance empire. Funded a "Superintendent Academy" to train corporate-style school leaders. Deployed them to dismantle urban districts. Teaching experience: zero.

These are the people who decided they knew better than the teachers, the researchers, the parents, and the communities who actually live inside the public education system. They arrived with the confidence of a door-to-door salesman who has never been inside your house but is absolutely certain your plumbing is wrong.

THE BOTTOM LINE: WHAT ACTUALLY WORKS

The good news — and there is good news — is that the data also shows what genuinely moves the needle:

  • Evidence-based pedagogy delivered by trained human teachers.
  • Targeted Federal Investment — The steepest post-pandemic recoveries happened in the highest-poverty districts that received direct, heavy infusions of federal pandemic relief funds. Money, directed to the right places, works. Vouchers redirected to private schools do not.
  • Chronic Absenteeism Intervention — 23% of students are now chronically absent, up from 15% pre-pandemic. No curriculum — AI or otherwise — works on an empty chair.
  • Human Teachers in Small Classes — Ironically, the wealthy families whose foundations are pushing AI-driven "personalized learning" for public school kids are simultaneously paying premium prices for private schools that advertise small, human-led class sizes. The hypocrisy is not subtle.

THE VERDICT

Twenty-six years. Hundreds of billions of dollars in "philanthropic" investment. An entire generation of American children used as test subjects in an ideological experiment they never consented to. And the result?

8th-grade reading scores at their lowest since 1990. Math down in 70% of districts. 13-year-olds performing at 1971 levels. And the architects of the disaster selling you the subscription to fix it.

Whether this was malicious design or spectacular incompetence is, at this point, almost beside the point. The effect is the same: a public institution that belonged to every American community has been systematically weakened, defunded, destabilized, and now offered back to you — piece by piece, platform by platform, $9.99 a month at a time.

The smoke alarms were turned off. The building burned. And the arsonist is standing in the rubble with a fire extinguisher, a press release, and a very reasonable introductory rate.

Sources: Harvard/Stanford/Dartmouth Education Scorecard; HuffPost/AP federal NAEP long-term trends data (June 10, 2026); P.L. Thomas, "Read Kids Count 2026 with Caution," Substack (June 9, 2026); Big Education Ape, "Pay Per Learn" (June 2026); RAND Corporation evaluation of Gates Foundation Intensive Partnerships for Effective Teaching.


SOURCES & LINKS

🎓 Academic & Research Reports

1. Education Scorecard — Harvard, Stanford & Dartmouth The landmark multi-university study documenting the pre-pandemic "learning recession" beginning in 2013. 🔗 https://educationscorecard.org/

2. Harvard Center for Education Policy Research — Education Recovery Scorecard Interactive district-level data on learning loss and academic recovery across the U.S. 🔗 https://cepr.harvard.edu/education-recovery-scorecard

3. Stanford Accelerate Learning — "U.S. Student Achievement Was Falling Long Before the Pandemic" Key findings from the Harvard/Stanford/Dartmouth team on the structural roots of the learning recession. 🔗 http://acceleratelearning.stanford.edu/story/u-s-student-achievement-was-falling-long-before-pandemic-study-finds/

4. MDPI Education Sciences (2024) — Out-of-School Factors & Test Score Variance Peer-reviewed study finding that over 62% of standardized test score variance is causally linked to family income and social capital — not school quality. 🔗 https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/14/2/129

5. RAND Corporation — Evaluation of Gates Foundation "Intensive Partnerships for Effective Teaching" Independent evaluation concluding the multi-million dollar teacher evaluation initiative had zero impact on student achievement or equity gaps. 🔗 https://www.rand.org/education-and-labor/projects/intensive-partnerships.html


📰 News & Journalism

6. HuffPost / AP — "Teens' Reading And Math Scores Have Stagnated, U.S. Test Results Show" (June 10, 2026) Federal NAEP long-term trends data confirming 13-year-olds' scores remain below pre-pandemic levels and at near-1971 reading levels. 🔗 https://www.huffpost.com/entry/teens-reading-math-scores-stagnated-us-test-results-show_n_6a29655ae4b02d9edc7ec995

7. NPR Instagram / Report Summary — 2026 Education Scorecard Coverage NPR's summary of the 2026 Education Scorecard findings on the learning recession. 🔗 https://www.instagram.com/reel/DYZ8ycPCHik/


✍️ Independent Education Commentary & Analysis

8. P.L. Thomas (Furman University) — "Read Kids Count 2026 with Caution" (June 9, 2026) Professor Thomas's critical analysis of the Kids Count 2026 report, warning against misuse of NAEP data and manufactured crisis narratives. 🔗 https://paulthomas701128.substack.com/p/read-kids-count-2026-with-caution

9. Big Education Ape — "Pay Per Learn: How Silicon Valley Decided Your Kid's Education Should Come With a Monthly Subscription Fee" (June 2026) Critical breakdown of the subscription-based EdTech model and Silicon Valley's monetization of public education. 🔗 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/pay-per-learn-how-silicon-valley.html

10. Big Education Ape — "Welcome to the Subscription Society: Terms & Conditions Apply" (April 2026) Analysis of how the subscription economy has colonized public institutions, including education. 🔗 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/04/welcome-to-subscription-society-terms.html


📊 Primary Data Sources

11. Nation's Report Card — NAEP Long-Term Trends Assessment (2024–2025) Official federal testing data tracking student performance since the 1970s — the primary dataset behind the HuffPost/AP reporting. 🔗 https://www.nationsreportcard.gov/ltt/2025/

12. Annie E. Casey Foundation — Kids Count 2026 Data Book The annual child well-being report that Dr. P.L. Thomas urges readers to approach with critical caution. 🔗 https://www.aecf.org/resources/2026-kids-count-data-book


🧑‍🏫 Key Voices Cited

NameTitle / AffiliationRole in Article
Dr. P.L. ThomasProfessor of Education, Furman UniversityCautions against misreading Kids Count 2026 data
Tom KaneFaculty Director, CEPR, Harvard UniversityLead author, Education Scorecard; coined "mudslide" framing
Matthew SoldnerActing Commissioner, NCESConfirmed decline predates pandemic
Lesley MuldoonExecutive Director, National Assessment Governing BoardCalled for urgent focus on adolescent learners
Bruce BakerSchool Finance ResearcherWarned against grade 4 NAEP score misuse
Paul GorskiIntercultural Education ScholarProvided the "good intentions are not enough" framework

All links verified as of June 10, 2026. Independent sources are prioritized throughout; no links are sponsored or affiliated with EdTech vendors or billionaire-funded foundations.