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Monday, March 9, 2026

THE $7 TRILLION CLASSROOM COUP: HOW BILLIONAIRES TURNED YOUR KID'S SCHOOL INTO A SUBSCRIPTION SERVICE

 

THE $7 TRILLION CLASSROOM COUP

HOW BILLIONAIRES TURNED YOUR KID'S SCHOOL INTO A SUBSCRIPTION SERVICE

A Case Study in Jean-Claude Brizard and the Art of Turning Public Education Into Private Profit

Introduction: The Heist You Didn't Know Was Happening

Imagine if someone told you in the year 2000 that by 2026, a handful of billionaires and private equity firms would effectively own the "operating system" of American public schools. You'd probably laugh. After all, education is a public good, right? A constitutional mandate. The great equalizer.

Well, joke's on us.

The global education market is now worth $7 trillion annually—roughly the GDP of Germany and Japan combined. And if you think that kind of money was going to sit there without attracting the attention of venture capitalists, tech oligarchs, and private equity vultures, you haven't been paying attention to how capitalism works.

This is the story of how billionaire foundations, Silicon Valley giants, and Wall Street firms executed a three-decade plan to capture, privatize, and monetize public education. It's a tale of "venture philanthropy" morphing into algorithmic surveillance, of teachers' unions crushed under the weight of "data-driven accountability," and of one man—Jean-Claude Brizard—whose career arc reads like a playbook for the entire scheme.

Buckle up. Class is in session.

Part I: The Business Plan in Three Acts

Act One: The Foundation (2000–2010) — "We're Here to Help"

In the beginning, there were the Big Three: Bill Gates, the Walton Family, and Eli Broad. They looked upon America's public schools and saw not children, but inefficiency. Not communities, but markets. Not teachers, but labor costs.

Their weapon of choice? Philanthropy—but not the kind that builds libraries. This was venture philanthropy, a model borrowed from Silicon Valley where you "invest" in systemic change, measure "outcomes," and scale what works. Translation: use tax-deductible donations to rewrite public policy in your image.

The Gates Foundation kicked things off with the "Small Schools" initiative, dumping billions into breaking up large urban high schools. When that failed spectacularly, they pivoted without apology to Common Core State Standards—a nationalized curriculum that just happened to require expensive new textbooks, software, and standardized tests.

The Walton Family Foundation (yes, the Walmart people) became the sugar daddy of the charter school movement, funneling over $1 billion into creating a parallel school system that siphoned students—and funding—away from traditional public schools.

The Broad Foundation took a different tack: they created the Broad Superintendents Academy, a fast-track program to train corporate executives, military officers, and lawyers to run school districts like businesses. No education degree required. Just a belief in "data-driven management" and a willingness to treat teachers like assembly-line workers.

Enter Jean-Claude Brizard, Broad Fellow, Class of 2007.

The Goal: Create the policy infrastructure—Common Core, high-stakes testing, charter expansion, data tracking—that would make schools dependent on technology and ripe for corporate takeover.

The Investment: Foundations spent roughly $500 million to leverage $4.35 billion in federal "Race to the Top" funds. That's a 9:1 return on lobbying investment. Not bad.

Act Two: The Platform (2011–2019) — "Resistance Is Futile"

Once the foundations built the policy scaffolding, Big Tech moved in to own the infrastructure.

Google made the most elegant play. In 2011, they introduced Chromebooks for Education—cheap, cloud-based laptops bundled with "free" G-Suite software. Schools, starved for funding and now mandated to administer online standardized tests, gobbled them up. By 2016, Google owned over 50% of the K-12 device market.

But the real prize wasn't the hardware. It was the data. Every keystroke, every search, every document created by students flowed through Google's servers. They weren't selling laptops; they were building lifelong user dependency. Get a kid on Gmail at age 7, and they'll still be on it at 47.

Microsoft and Apple scrambled to catch up, but the game had changed. Education wasn't about selling software anymore—it was about ecosystem lock-in.

Meanwhile, Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan launched the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative (CZI) in 2015—but here's the kicker: they structured it as an LLC, not a foundation. This allowed them to invest in for-profit EdTech startups, lobby for legislation, and make political donations—all while claiming the moral high ground of "philanthropy."

CZI poured money into personalized learning platforms—software that promised to tailor education to each child's needs but in practice meant kids staring at screens while teachers became glorified hall monitors.

Jean-Claude Brizard, by now a Senior Advisor at the Gates Foundation, was helping to architect this transition. His message was clear: schools needed to embrace a "Strong Data Culture." Translation: every aspect of a child's education—attendance, behavior, test scores, even social-emotional states—should be tracked, quantified, and fed into algorithms.

The Goal: Make schools utterly dependent on corporate platforms for day-to-day operations.

The Investment: Venture capital and corporate R&D in EdTech hit $9.5 billion annually by 2019.

Act Three: The Takeover (2020–2026) — "Efficiency Through AI"

Then came COVID-19, and the floodgates opened.

Overnight, every school in America went digital. Teachers scrambled to learn Zoom. Parents became de facto homeschool administrators. And private equity saw an opportunity too good to pass up.

Between 2020 and 2024, PE firms went on a buying spree, snapping up the companies that had become the "essential infrastructure" of schooling:

  • Bain Capital bought PowerSchool for $5.6 billion (2024)
  • KKR acquired Instructure (Canvas LMS) for $4.8 billion (2021)
  • Blackstone and Vista Equity took Ellucian private for $5 billion (2021)
  • EQT AB purchased Nord Anglia Education (a global chain of premium private schools) for $14.5 billion (2024)

These weren't just software companies. They were data monopolies. PowerSchool alone manages student information for over 45 million students across 90 countries. That's not a product—that's a panopticon.

And here's where Jean-Claude Brizard re-enters the story. Now serving as President and CEO of Digital Promise (a nonprofit with deep ties to the Department of Education and tech companies), Brizard became a key evangelist for AI in education. He authored white papers for PowerSchool, sat on the board of Rocketship Public Schools (a charter network known for "blended learning"), and championed the idea that AI could finally deliver the "personalized learning" that had eluded reformers for decades.

PowerSchool's flagship AI product? PowerBuddy—a generative AI assistant that helps students with homework, generates lesson plans for teachers, and answers parent questions. Sounds helpful, right?

Except PowerBuddy also:

  • Tracks every student interaction
  • Feeds data into predictive models
  • Operates within a walled garden owned by Bain Capital
  • Costs schools millions in annual subscription fees

The Goal: Replace human judgment with algorithmic "efficiency" and extract rent from every interaction.

The Investment: Private equity and venture capital poured over $20 billion annually into EdTech between 2020–2022. By 2026, Microsoft alone committed $17.5 billion globally to AI skills training—essentially ensuring the next generation of workers is trained on their platform.

Part II: The Evolution of EdTech — From Overhead Projectors to Algorithmic Overlords

Let's zoom out for a second. How did we get from chalkboards to AI tutors in just 25 years?

Phase 1: Digitization (2000–2010)

  • The Pitch: "Let's put textbooks on computers!"
  • The Reality: Clunky software, expensive hardware, minimal impact on learning.
  • The Winner: Pearson, McGraw-Hill (traditional publishers pivoting to digital).

Phase 2: Platformization (2011–2019)

  • The Pitch: "Let's move everything to the cloud!"
  • The Reality: Schools became dependent on Google, Microsoft, and Apple ecosystems.
  • The Winner: Big Tech (data harvesting + user lock-in).

Phase 3: Financialization (2020–2026)

  • The Pitch: "Let's use AI to personalize learning!"
  • The Reality: Private equity owns the infrastructure; schools pay subscription fees in perpetuity.
  • The Winner: Bain Capital, KKR, Blackstone (rent extraction + data monetization).

Part III: Jean-Claude Brizard — The Man Who Embodied the Plan

If you wanted to design a human avatar for the entire education privatization movement, you couldn't do better than Jean-Claude Brizard.

The Origin Story: Teacher to Technocrat

Brizard started as a teacher at Rikers Island—yes, the notorious New York City jail. It's a compelling origin story, and he's told it often. From there, he rose through the ranks of the NYC Department of Education, eventually becoming a Regional Superintendent overseeing 100+ schools in Brooklyn.

So far, so good. A classic American success story.

But then came the Broad Foundation.

The Broad Academy: MBA School for School Chiefs

In 2007, Brizard was accepted into the Broad Superintendents Academy, a program explicitly designed to train non-traditional leaders to run school districts like corporations. The curriculum focused on:

  • Data-driven accountability
  • Portfolio management (mixing charters and traditional schools)
  • Labor reform (weakening unions)
  • Efficiency metrics (doing more with less)

Graduates of the Broad Academy became known as "Broadies"—a term of endearment among reformers and a slur among teachers' unions.

Rochester (2008–2011): The Warmup

Brizard's first superintendent gig was in Rochester, New York. He immediately pushed for:

  • Merit pay for teachers (tying salary to test scores)
  • School closures (shutting down "underperforming" schools)
  • The "portfolio model" (expanding charter schools)

The Rochester Teachers Association responded with a vote of no confidence. Brizard's approval rating among teachers cratered. But his stock among reformers soared.

He left Rochester for the big leagues: Chicago.

Chicago (2011–2012): The Disaster

Hired by Mayor Rahm Emanuel (himself a former investment banker and Obama's chief of staff), Brizard was tasked with implementing a radical reform agenda in the third-largest school district in America.

His signature move? Extending the school day from 5.75 hours to 7 hours for elementary students—without negotiating with the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU).

He also:

  • Pushed for school closures in predominantly Black and Latino neighborhoods
  • Advocated for teacher evaluations tied heavily to student test scores
  • Supported the expansion of charter schools

The CTU, led by the fiery Karen Lewis, fought back. In September 2012, Chicago teachers went on strike—the first in 25 years. It was a public relations disaster for Brizard and Emanuel.

Brizard resigned after just 17 months, but the damage was done. The strike galvanized teacher activism nationwide and exposed the deep unpopularity of corporate-style reform.

The Gates Foundation (2013–2016): The Strategist

After Chicago, Brizard landed softly at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation as Senior Advisor and Deputy Director for U.S. Programs. Here, he helped shape strategy around:

  • Common Core implementation
  • Teacher evaluation systems
  • Data interoperability (making sure all the different EdTech systems could talk to each other—and share data)

This was the "brain trust" phase. Brizard wasn't running a district anymore; he was helping to design the system that all districts would operate within.

Digital Promise (2016–Present): The AI Evangelist

In 2016, Brizard became President and CEO of Digital Promise, a congressionally chartered nonprofit that acts as a bridge between the Department of Education, tech companies, and school districts.

Digital Promise's mission is to "accelerate innovation in education." In practice, that means:

  • Piloting AI tools in schools
  • Certifying EdTech products (giving them a stamp of approval)
  • Advocating for "digital equity" (ensuring all students have access to devices and internet—and thus, to data collection)

Brizard has been particularly vocal about the need for schools to adopt AI-driven personalized learning. He's written extensively for PowerSchool, arguing that a "Strong Data Culture" is essential for modern education.

The Rocketship Connection: The Board Member

Brizard also serves on the National Board of Directors for Rocketship Public Schools, a charter network famous for its "blended learning" model—kids spend significant time on computers using adaptive software while teachers manage the room.

Rocketship has been both celebrated (for serving low-income communities) and criticized (for high teacher turnover and over-reliance on technology). Brizard, as Chair of the Achievement Committee, has been instrumental in scaling the model.

The Through-Line: From Vulture Philanthropy to AI Profit

Brizard's career is a perfect microcosm of the entire privatization project:

  1. Start with "reform" rhetoric (close the achievement gap, empower families, accountability)
  2. Weaken unions and close schools (create a sense of crisis)
  3. Introduce technology as the solution (data systems, adaptive software)
  4. Normalize surveillance and metrics (every child is a data point)
  5. Hand the infrastructure to private companies (PowerSchool, Google, etc.)
  6. Monetize through AI and subscriptions (rent extraction in perpetuity)

He's not a villain in a comic book. He's a true believer—someone who genuinely thinks that running schools like businesses, tracking every data point, and replacing teachers with algorithms will lead to better outcomes.

But the road to a $7 trillion market is paved with good intentions.


The Billionaire and Corporate Players: A Rogues' Gallery

Let's name names.

The Foundations (The "R&D Wing")

FoundationFocus$ Spent (Est.)Key Legacy
Gates FoundationCommon Core, teacher evaluation, data systems$5+ billionNationalized curriculum; normalized high-stakes testing
Walton Family FoundationCharter schools, school choice$1+ billionBuilt parallel charter system; drained funding from traditional schools
Broad FoundationLeadership training, governance reform$500+ millionTrained "corporate" superintendents; weakened democratic control
Chan Zuckerberg InitiativePersonalized learning, AI$3+ billionBlurred line between philanthropy and for-profit investment

The Tech Giants (The "Platform Owners")

CompanyProductMarket ShareData Harvested
GoogleChromebooks, G-Suite50%+ of K-12 devicesSearch history, emails, docs, location
MicrosoftWindows, Office 365, Teams30%+ of K-12Emails, docs, video calls, behavioral data
AppleiPads, MacBooks15%+ of K-12App usage, location, device interactions

The Private Equity Firms (The "Rent Extractors")

FirmAcquisitionPriceWhat They Own
Bain CapitalPowerSchool$5.6BStudent information systems for 45M+ students
KKRInstructure (Canvas)$4.8BLearning management system for higher ed + K-12
Blackstone/VistaEllucian$5.0BUniversity ERP systems
EQT ABNord Anglia$14.5BGlobal chain of premium private schools

The Endgame: $7 Trillion Is Too Big to Ignore

Here's the brutal truth: education is now too valuable NOT to privatize.

At $7 trillion globally, the education market is larger than the entire U.S. defense budget (roughly $800 billion annually). It's a recession-proof, government-funded, compulsory market. Every child must attend school. Every school must have software, devices, and data systems.

It's a capitalist's dream.

And the beauty of the plan? It was sold as helping kids.

  • "We're closing the achievement gap!" (Translation: We're creating a market for charter schools.)
  • "We're empowering teachers with data!" (Translation: We're surveilling them and tying their pay to test scores.)
  • "We're personalizing learning!" (Translation: We're replacing human interaction with software subscriptions.)

Conclusion: The Classroom as a Service (CaaS)

In 2026, the average American public school operates on:

  • Google or Microsoft cloud platform (subscription)
  • PowerSchool or Infinite Campus student information system (subscription)
  • Canvas or Schoology learning management system (subscription)
  • AI-powered tutoring and assessment tools (subscription)
  • Chromebooks or iPads (hardware + ecosystem lock-in)

Every single one of those is owned by a private company. Every single one extracts rent. Every single one collects data.

The public school—once a cornerstone of democracy, a place where communities came together to educate the next generation—has been quietly transformed into a data-harvesting, rent-extracting, subscription-based service.

And Jean-Claude Brizard? He's not the architect. He's the general contractor—the guy who showed up at every phase of construction, from foundation to finish, making sure the blueprint was followed.

From Rikers Island to the Broad Academy. From Rochester to Chicago. From the Gates Foundation to Digital Promise. From charter school boards to PowerSchool white papers.

He's the man who turned "reform" into profit.

And the joke—the bitter, expensive joke—is that we paid for it. With our tax dollars, our children's data, and our democracy.

Class dismissed.

Sources Referenced:

  • HolonIQ EdTech Market Data
  • PowerSchool acquisition details (Bain Capital, 2024)
  • Digital Promise mission and leadership
  • Broad Foundation Superintendents Academy
  • Chicago Teachers Union strike (2012)
  • Rochester Teachers Association vote of no confidence
  • Chan Zuckerberg Initiative structure and investments
  • Google Chromebook market share data
  • Private equity EdTech acquisitions (2020–2026)

For more on the intersection of technology, policy, and profit in education, follow the money—and the data.