
Creative Freedom Becomes Creative Chaos Fast. Here’s the Structure That Actually Helps.
Remember when your biggest teaching worry was whether you had enough copies of sheet music? Those were simpler times. Now you’re competing with Alix Earle

Remember when your biggest teaching worry was whether you had enough copies of sheet music? Those were simpler times. Now you’re competing with Alix Earle

Students intently watch 30-day 24/7 livestreams of Kai Cenat, but tune out after ten minutes into a lecture. Before the finger points to students’ attention

EdTech sales is like playing telephone in a room full of people who speak different languages—the message gets more garbled with each handoff. The person

Kids will watch Mr. Beast give away $1 million for eight straight hours, but zone out during a 20-minute history lesson. We can’t blame them.

You’re a superintendent who confidently rolls out the latest educational technology across your district. Three months later, teachers have abandoned the platform and students don’t

Gone are the days when the biggest classroom distraction used to be a paper airplane. Now you’re up against algorithms designed by Stanford PhDs to

Three students tested out of special education using this four-step chunking method. Learn how breaking content apart builds kids up.

Imagine this: Your district treats EdTech procurement like ordering from McDonald’s—check the menu, pick the least-terrible option, hope it doesn’t give everyone food poisoning. Ana

Michael Vilardo paid $70,000 to watch boring Zoom lectures at UCLA. That’s roughly the cost of a Corvette, except that a premium sports car would’ve

Imagine a kindergarten teacher managing 30 five-year-olds, their parents, and district administrators—all while backwards-planning an entire year of Spanish immersion curriculum. Now imagine that same
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