Sal Khan, Khan Academy and Ed Tech Venture Capital
A
WONDERFUL and important cover story in this week’s Forbes about Sal
Khan, Khan Academies, and the big surge in venture capital investments in education technology:
It’s a prototypical Silicon Valley ethos,
with one exception: The Khan Academy, which features 3,400 short
instructional videos along with interactive quizzes and tools for
teachers to chart student progress, is a nonprofit, boasting
a mission of “a free world-class education for anyone anywhere.” There
is no employee equity; there will be no IPO; funding comes from
philanthropists, not venture capitalists.
“I could have started a for-profit,
venture-backed business that has a good spirit, and I think there are
many of them–Google for instance,” says Khan, his eyes dancing below his
self-described unibrow. “Maybe I could reach a billion
people. That is high impact, but what happens in 50 years?”
It’s a fair question, with an increasingly
sure answer: The next half-century of education innovation is being
shaped right now. After decades of yammering about “reform,” with more
and more money spent on declining results, technology
is finally poised to disrupt how people learn. And that creates immense
opportunities for both for-profit entrepreneurs and nonprofit agitators
like Khan.
How immense? According to a report from the
President’s Council of Economic Advisers, global spending on education
is $3.9 trillion, or 5.6% of planetary GDP. America spends the
most–about $1.3 trillion a year–yet the U.S. ranks
25th out of the 34 OECD countries in mathematics, 17th in science and
14th in reading. And, as in so many other areas of American life, those
averages obscure a deeper divide: The U.S. is the only developed country
to have high proportions of both top and
bottom performers. About a fifth of American 15-year-olds do not have
basic competence in science; 23% can’t use math in daily life.
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