Your cart is currently empty!

Education for profit has slowly crept into school systems under the guise of reform. Itโs subtle at first, new reading programs, digital tools, data dashboards, but the effects are becoming unmistakable. Teachers feel it in their loss of autonomy. Students suffer through a patchwork of โsolutionsโ that often donโt work. Meanwhile, companies supplying these methods are thriving. The result? A generation of learners still struggling with comprehension, while school districts double down on expensive, unproven fixes.
Education for Profit Is Undermining Real Teaching
Letโs be blunt. This isnโt about improving schools. Itโs about money, education for profit. Districts are spending millions on โcomprehensiveโ learning packages that promise miracles, often designed by companies with little classroom experience. The result? Teachers are pushed aside in favor of prepackaged scripts and step-by-step reading formulas.
These programs often sound impressive during district presentations. They come with flashy graphs, vague buzzwords like โdata-driven,โ and the seductive promise of closing learning gaps overnight. But hereโs the catch: they rarely deliver. Not because the goals are flawed, but because the methodology ignores the most valuable asset in a school, the teacher.
The Cost of Replacing Teachers with Programs
Teachers, ironically, still carry the accountability. They attend Professional Learning Communities (PLCs) where they’re expected to explain data from programs they didnโt choose and donโt believe in. The logic? If student scores are low, teachers must not be following the program โwith fidelity.โ
But hereโs what doesnโt get said out loud: using several conflicting reading methodologies at once isnโt innovative, itโs chaos. In some districts, teachers are expected to simultaneously juggle phonics-heavy methods, tech-based comprehension platforms, and district-created assessments, all while tailoring instruction for students with vastly different reading levels.
Meanwhile, reading comprehension continues to decline. Students make it to middle and high school still unsure how to draw meaning from what they read. And rather than empowering teachers to intervene, districts double down on new programs many of which come from the same companies that sold the last set of broken promises.National Council on Teacher Quality
Why Students Struggle When Reading Instruction Fails
Itโs hard to overstate how deep the damage runs. Students are being left behindโnot because they canโt learn, but because their instruction lacks coherence. One week theyโre on a phonics app, the next theyโre in a small group reading nonfiction, the week after that theyโre testing again.
Thereโs no time to build stamina or confidence. No time for meaningful feedback. And no time for actual growth. Kids feel it. Many begin to assume theyโre just not good readers. That belief can linger for years and sometimes a lifetime, The Hechinger Report on Reading Instruction.
This issue is especially pressing in underserved communities, where students often rely most on school for access to reading materials and adult guidance. When education for profit dominates, these students are hit the hardest.
Teachers Know What WorksโTheyโre Just Not Allowed to Use It
Teachers have always had a complex job. But lately, complexity has turned into confusion. Theyโre navigating rigid curriculums, sudden shifts in district policy, and programs that override professional judgment. They arenโt being asked what works. Theyโre being told what must work, regardless of evidence.
The irony? Many of these mandated strategies contradict each other. For instance, a teacher may be told to emphasize decoding with struggling readers but then asked to focus on comprehension skills in the next lesson even if the students canโt yet read the words.
Teachers are skilled at adapting, but even the best can only juggle so much. Eventually, something drops. And unfortunately, it’s often student progress that pays the price. Learning Policy Institute: Teacher Autonomy
Whoโs Benefiting from This Chaos?
Not students. Not teachers. But someone is. Education technology companies and publishing firms rake in billions from contracts with districts hungry for quick fixes. These companies promise streamlined solutions but often provide scripted, soulless materials that require teachers to follow rigid instructions instead of using professional intuition.
Meanwhile, the metrics used to justify these programs are often murky. Pilot results are exaggerated. โGrowthโ is measured in isolated skills, not genuine comprehension. Still, the cycle continues. A program fails. A new one is introduced. More money flows. Education Week: The Hidden Cost of EdTech
And yet, reading comprehension rates stay flat or decline. Students move on without mastering critical thinking or analysis. Teachers burn out. But the companies? They keep cashing checks.
So, What Needs to Change?
First, districts need to stop treating teachers like liabilities and start recognizing them as experts. Give them the tools, training, and time to do what theyโre trained to do, teach.
Second, schools must commit to evidence-based practices that allow for flexibility, rather than rigid scripts. Real growth takes time, not just software.
Finally, the focus must return to student outcomes and not company profits. The question shouldn’t be โWhich program did we buy?โ but โDid our students actually learn how to read and think for themselves?โ
This is not a radical idea. Itโs just the opposite. And, itโs what education used to be before profit took over the classroom. Stanford CEPA: Literacy and Equity