Disruptive Education Innovation

  • Americans raise their children using school as the main purpose of life. Everything we do, it must be bringing us closer to our goal of educational excellence.
  • Performing well in the education system was the key to social mobility, and improving our status in the country – without that pathway the American Dream is nonexistent – let’s rebuild it.
  • The changing value of a college degree. The value of your degree is diluted by the value of my degree.
  • Teaching people to build startups that solve social problems.
  • Technology is automating even the most prestigious occupations of the workforce.
  • The lag in the education system’s ability to change its ways is resulting in helpless, jobless, debt-ridden college grads, and unless something changes in the near future the same issue will result in the ultimate demise of the institution of higher education as we know it today.
  • Identifying the opportunity for our 6 million millennials to step in and take the stage as we build the foundation of the new economy.

I was told the key to success was to work hard in school and get a college education. That was the only purpose of life. The reason we woke up in the morning, the reason we memorized phrases and formulas, and the reason we were supposed to act a certain way. It was all about college.

The American education system had this prestige at one point because it allowed any student, regardless of race or religion, opportunity. A hard-working student from the poor neighborhood on the outskirts of town would be able to compete against her peers for the best grades. If the performance was good enough, the student would receive the chance to attend prestigious universities. These universities were channels that led to secure jobs in the economy. Therefore, a low class American would become socially-mobile and able to climb the ladder of success all thanks to her education.

The value of a college degree today, however, holds different value. It does not matter if you want to become a lawyer, doctor, or work in finance.

These three examples were once among the highest paid, elite occupations in this country.

Today, the medical, legal, and financial industries are adapting new technology which, among other things, automates jobs. That leaves each industry with fewer jobs available. This causes the level of competition to increase in each job market. The problem is compounded by the increase in students pursuing degrees in each of those markets.

If medical doctors, lawyers, and traders are unable to find work, I don’t expect my sociology degree to do much.

Eventually, the jobs of the current economy will be completely absorbed by the new economy. We will run into major problems at this point because 1) more people than ever will be competing for the same employment opportunities, and 2) the education system will not have updated its model yet.

As a longstanding incumbent institution, higher education is predictably resistant to adopting new technologies, new ways of doing things, and allowing anyone to “tread on their turf” who is not a tenured professor. If you have the unfortunate luck of working or attending one of these outdated institutions you should know that these universities are taking millions and millions of dollars from students who think they will be given an education that allows them to succeed in the world. Little do these students know, is that by the time they graduate in 4-6 years, the jobs they went to school for will no longer exist.

If 6 million of us work towards a common goal, even if only for a moment, I know whatever we do will be incredible.

You will create value within your local community.

You will build businesses that employ Americans for the next 100+ years.

You will build the foundation of our new economy.

You will shape the future of America.

The White House is helping Americans pay for up to two years of college, but the problem is not solved by money – it’s solved by rethinking the way we approach learning as a whole.