While most Americans remain deeply skeptical of AI – they don’t trust it to suggest pizza toppings or make music – some of the country’s wealthiest families are betting tens of thousands of dollars that it can teach their children. Startups like Forge Prep and Alpha School are charging premium tuition to turn students into beta testers for AI-powered education, with Silicon Valley venture capitalists leading the charge into what’s effectively an experiment in automated learning.

The latest AI experiment isn’t happening in a tech lab – it’s taking place in classrooms filled with the children of America’s elite. Companies like Forge Prep and Alpha School are charging families tens of thousands of dollars annually for what amounts to AI-tutored education, and wealthy parents, particularly in Silicon Valley, are signing up in droves.

Shaun Johnson, a San Francisco-based venture capitalist, told the Wall Street Journal he plans to send his children to one of these AI-powered schools. His decision represents a growing trend among tech industry elites who see artificial intelligence not as a threat to education but as its future – despite widespread public skepticism about the technology’s capabilities.

The irony is hard to miss. While polling shows most Americans don’t trust AI, wealthy families are essentially turning their kids into guinea pigs for AI tutoring systems. These aren’t after-school programs or supplemental tools – they’re full-fledged educational models built around “interactive project-based workshops” where AI does much of the heavy lifting traditionally handled by human teachers.

Forge Prep and Alpha School pitch themselves as revolutionary alternatives to traditional schooling, but the reality is more complex. Parents are paying premium prices for their children to interact with AI systems that, in other contexts, have famously suggested putting glue on pizza or generated music that listeners actively reject. The bet these families are making is that AI tutors, despite their well-documented shortcomings in consumer applications, can somehow master the far more nuanced challenge of educating children.

The model these schools employ centers on AI-driven personalized learning paths, where algorithms adapt to each student’s pace and style. Proponents argue this addresses a core weakness of traditional education: the one-size-fits-all classroom. But critics point out that teaching requires emotional intelligence, mentorship, and human judgment – qualities AI doesn’t possess.

What makes this trend particularly noteworthy is the class divide it’s creating. While public schools struggle with teacher shortages and underfunding, wealthy families are opting out entirely to experiment with unproven AI systems. The annual tuition at these AI schools often exceeds what many American families earn in a year, effectively creating a two-tier system where the rich get experimental tech and everyone else gets traditional (and increasingly underfunded) public education.

Silicon Valley’s enthusiasm for AI education isn’t entirely surprising. Tech executives and investors have long believed that software can solve problems previously thought to require human expertise. They’ve applied this logic to transportation with self-driving cars, to creativity with AI art generators, and now to education. But the stakes feel different when the product being tested is someone’s child.

The schools themselves remain somewhat opaque about their methodologies and outcomes. There’s limited data on whether students in these programs actually perform better academically, develop stronger critical thinking skills, or gain advantages over traditionally educated peers. What exists instead is mostly marketing language about “personalized learning” and “adaptive AI tutors” – terms that sound impressive but lack empirical backing.

This development also raises questions about what happens when these AI-tutored students eventually need to interact with the broader world. If their entire educational experience has been mediated by algorithms optimized for their individual preferences, will they struggle in environments that require collaboration, compromise, and dealing with perspectives different from their own?

The timing of this trend is particularly revealing. AI companies are facing mounting criticism over accuracy, bias, and the environmental costs of training massive models. Yet here are wealthy families betting that these same systems can nurture the next generation. It’s either remarkable faith in the technology or a troubling willingness to experiment on children because they can afford to take the risk.

The emergence of AI-powered schools for wealthy families reveals a stark paradox in how Americans view artificial intelligence. While the general public remains skeptical of AI for basic tasks, the rich are willing to pay premium prices to let it educate their children. Whether this represents visionary faith in technology’s potential or a reckless experiment with young minds won’t be clear for years. What’s certain is that it’s creating yet another divide between the haves and have-nots – one where access to experimental AI education becomes another luxury good, available only to those who can afford to take the risk.