EPISODE · Jun 30, 2026 · 1H 16M
The Education System Is Still Trapped in 1893 (E208)
from El Podcast · host Ted Dintersmith, Jesse Wright, El Podcast, El Podcast Media
Former venture capitalist and education reformer Ted Dintersmith explains why America's 19th-century education system is failing students in the AI era—and how schools can better prepare young people for the future. Guest Bio Ted Dintersmith is a bestselling author, award-winning filmmaker, former top-performing venture capitalist, and one of America's leading education innovators. He has spent more than 15 years visiting schools across all 50 states researching how education can better prepare students for a rapidly changing, technology-driven world. Topics Discussed Why today's education system still resembles the factory model created in 1893 How AI is making traditional education increasingly obsolete The unintended consequences of standardized testing Why creativity, curiosity, and agency matter more than memorization Goodhart's Law and how education optimizes the wrong metrics The declining value of many college degrees Why statistics is more valuable than calculus for most careers Finland's education model versus the U.S. system Entrepreneurship, skilled trades, and career-based learning Why schools fail to teach financial literacy, probability, and real-world math AI's impact on college graduates and knowledge work Why boys increasingly struggle in the education system How internships and apprenticeships could transform high school What an AI-ready education system should look like Main Points America's education system was designed for factory jobs—not today's knowledge economy. Standardized testing has become the goal rather than a useful measurement of learning. Schools reward memorization while undervaluing creativity, critical thinking, and problem-solving. College should be one option—not the default path for every student. High school math emphasizes topics that few adults ever use while neglecting statistics and probability. AI is rapidly replacing routine knowledge work, making traditional academic preparation less valuable. Career education, entrepreneurship, internships, and apprenticeships deserve equal status with college preparation. Teachers are often prevented from innovating because schools prioritize test scores. Finland demonstrates that trusting teachers and reducing standardized testing can improve educational outcomes. Education should prepare students to create value, solve problems, and adapt—not simply pass exams. Books Talked About What School Could Be Aftermath: The Life-Changing Math They Never Taught You Most Likely to Succeed (referenced through discussion of the documentary and education reforms) The End of Average (referenced conceptually through individualized learning themes) Top 3 Quotes "Rote schools for rote jobs made sense. Today, rote jobs are disappearing—but our schools haven't changed." "We're measuring what is easy to test instead of what is important to learn." "The people who change the world are the ones with the confidence to ignore convention and create their own path." 🎙 The Pod is hosted by Jesse Wright💬 For guest suggestions, questions, or media inquiries, reach out at https://elpodcast.media/📬 Never miss an episode – subscribe and follow wherever you get your podcasts.⭐️ If you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review the show. It helps others find us. Thanks for listening!
What this episode covers
America's education system was designed for the Industrial Revolution—but the AI revolution is exposing its biggest flaws. Ted Dintersmith explains why schools are preparing students for a world that no longer exists, and what must change before an entire generation is left behind.
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The Education System Is Still Trapped in 1893 (E208)
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