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Tuesday, March 31, 2026

WHO IN THE WORLD READS THE BIG EDUCATION APE? EVERYTHING YOU WANTED TO KNOW BUT WERE AFRAID TO ASK

 

WHO IN THE WORLD READS THE BIG EDUCATION APE? EVERYTHING YOU WANTED TO KNOW BUT WERE AFRAID TO ASK

A witty, irreverent, and surprisingly earnest guide to the most passionate corner of the education internet

Picture this: It's 6:47 a.m. somewhere in the world. A kindergarten teacher in Chicago is sipping her third coffee before the school day begins. A parent activist in Brisbane is scrolling through his phone while his kid eats Vegemite toast. A union organizer in Manila is on a jeepney, earbuds in, reading on her lunch break. A retired academic in Edinburgh is in his dressing gown, muttering darkly at his laptop screen. What do all these people have in common? They've all opened The Big Education Ape — and they are not in a good mood about what they're reading. But they can't stop.

Welcome to the most gloriously indignant blog in the education universe.

So, What Is The Big Education Ape, Exactly?

Think of it as the war room, the watchtower, and the group chat that nobody in corporate education reform wants you to be in. Run by Mike Simpson, the Big Education Ape is part news aggregator, part advocacy manual, part daily dispatch from the front lines of a battle most people don't even know is being fought — the battle over who actually controls your child's classroom.

It doesn't break news so much as it connects dots — the kind of dots that, once connected, make you look at a "charitable foundation" funding a school board election and say, "Ah. So that's what's happening."

It is not subtle. It is not trying to be. And that, frankly, is the point.

The Global Congregation: Who Are These People?

Here's the delicious irony at the heart of the Big Education Ape's readership: a blog rooted in hyper-local American education policy has somehow assembled a global coalition of the righteously alarmed. Let's meet them.

The American Core — The True Believers

The backbone of the readership is American, and they are motivated. We're talking:

  • Public school teachers and union members — especially from states where "labor action" is less a phrase and more a lifestyle (West Virginia, Arizona, Chicago — you know who you are). These readers use the blog the way a general uses intelligence briefings: to know what's coming before it arrives.

  • Opt-Out parents — a fiercely dedicated tribe of moms and dads who have decided that their eight-year-old will not, in fact, be spending six weeks preparing for a standardized test designed by a corporation headquartered in a glass tower in Manhattan. They come to the blog for data, legal arguments, and the profound comfort of knowing they are not alone.

  • Education scholars and edubloggers — the blog functions as a kind of intellectual switchboard for the broader "edublogosphere." Academics affiliated with networks like the Network for Public Education treat it as a curated feed of stories that local reporters filed and national media promptly ignored.

  • Early childhood advocates — a passionate contingent of preschool and kindergarten teachers who are, to put it mildly, furious that someone decided four-year-olds should have homework. They arrive daily looking for ammunition in the "War on Play."

  • Privacy hawks — parents and advocates who read the EdTech coverage with the focused intensity of someone who has just discovered their child's learning app has a 47-page data-sharing agreement.

The American reader treats the Big Education Ape less like a blog and more like a resistance manual — the kind you'd want in your bag when you're about to speak at a school board meeting and the person across the table has a PowerPoint funded by a billionaire foundation.

The International Audience — "Wait, This Is Happening Here Too?"

Outside the United States, the blog has cultivated a readership that uses American education policy the way a doctor uses a patient zero case study: with great interest and significant alarm.

  • British educators — particularly in England, where the "Academy" school system has given the word "privatization" a very familiar ring — follow the blog to compare notes. Reading about American charter school scandals, they nod with the weary recognition of someone who has seen this film before and knows exactly how it ends.

  • Canadian readers — clinical psychologists, teachers, and parents — gravitate toward the psychological impact coverage. High-stakes testing stress in children is, it turns out, not a uniquely American phenomenon, and Canadian readers arrive looking for the research to say so loudly at their own school board meetings.

  • French and European academics track the blog as part of their broader study of what scholars call GERM — the Global Education Reform Movement. (Yes, that acronym is intentional. No, the people who coined it were not fans.)

  • Australian teachers and librarians — particularly in Melbourne and Alice Springs — engage with the teacher autonomy content. They are, in the best possible way, the kind of people who will absolutely cite a blog post in a union meeting.

For the international reader, the Big Education Ape functions as an early warning system. The logic is simple and slightly chilling: American education experiments have a habit of becoming British education experiments, which become Australian education experiments, which become everyone's problem within a decade. Better to see it coming.

The Asia-Pacific Contingent — "We See You, Silicon Valley"

Perhaps the most surprising corner of the readership lives in the Asia-Pacific region, where the blog has found an audience among educators and parents who view the American education market as a proving ground for policies that will eventually be exported to their own classrooms.

  • Filipino teachers and union activists use the blog to study the mechanics of public-private partnerships — because understanding the "playbook" is the first step to countering it.

  • Singaporean and Hong Kong parents — living inside some of the world's most intense high-stakes testing cultures — read the play-based learning content with the quiet desperation of people who suspect, deep down, that something has gone wrong but need the research to confirm it.

  • New Zealand educators compare Mike Simpson's critiques to their own "Tomorrow's Schools" history, finding uncomfortable parallels that suggest the road to corporatized education is paved with very similar good intentions.

  • Japanese and South Korean academics focus heavily on the student privacy and digital divide coverage, particularly as both nations sprint toward full AI integration in classrooms and someone, somewhere, should probably be asking questions.

For Asia-Pacific readers, the blog is a critical mirror — a way of seeing the potential consequences of "American-style" reforms before those policies become too entrenched to dislodge.

 The Daily Issues: What Has Everyone So Worked Up?

Here's a structured look at the topics that send readers to the Big Education Ape every single morning, coffee in hand, ready to be outraged:

IssueWho's Reading ItWhy They Can't Look Away
💰 Billionaire Philanthropy & "Dark Money"US activists, international policy criticsGates, Walton, Bloomberg foundations shaping public policy through "charity"
🏫 Charter School ScandalsUS parents, UK Academy watchersFinancial mismanagement, selective enrollment, zero transparency
🎮 The War on PlayEarly childhood educators globallyKindergarten becoming First Grade; children losing recess for test prep
🤖 EdTech, AI & Student PrivacyPrivacy advocates, Asia-Pacific tech-skepticsData mining, algorithmic "teaching," the Silicon Valley classroom takeover
📝 High-Stakes Testing & Opt-OutUS parents, Canadian psychologistsThe Testing-Industrial Complex; Pearson's profits; childhood stress
🛡️ Social Safety Net ConnectionsUS labor activists, historiansThe same forces targeting schools are targeting Social Security and Medicare
✊ Teacher Labor RightsUnion members worldwideTeach for America's "fast-track" undermining; strike coverage; collective bargaining
🌐 Special Education & Disability RightsParents globallyHow "school choice" consistently leaves students with disabilities behind

The throughline connecting every single row in that table? The conviction that public education is a democratic institution — not a market opportunity.

The Bigger Picture: Why Does This Blog Matter?

What makes the Big Education Ape genuinely remarkable isn't the outrage — the internet has plenty of that. It's the specificity. The blog doesn't just say "billionaires are influencing schools." It names the foundations, traces the money, identifies the model legislation, and tells you which state is about to vote on it next Tuesday.

That specificity is why a kindergarten teacher in Chicago, a parent in Brisbane, a union organizer in Manila, and a retired academic in Edinburgh are all reading the same blog at 6:47 a.m. They're not just consuming content. They're building a case.

The Big Education Ape operates on a simple but powerful premise: the public in public education is worth defending, and defending it requires knowing exactly what — and who — you're up against.

For its readers, that's not just a blog post. That's a reason to get up in the morning.

Even before the coffee kicks in.

The Big Education Ape is curated daily by Mike Simpson — part archivist, part agitator, and apparently the one person on the internet who has read every single school board meeting agenda so you don't have to.