On Thursday evening, in the middle of summer break, a crowd of parents, teachers and school leaders logged on to watch a film about whether their profession has a future. Alpha School, the Austin-born network of private K-8 schools built around AI-powered learning, premiered Teachers 2.0 on July 9, a mini-documentary that takes direct aim at the most persistent fear in education technology: that artificial intelligence is coming for teachers’ jobs.
The film’s answer is blunt. It is not.
The case the film makes
Teachers 2.0 follows educators who use AI to clear away the repetitive administrative work that eats up their days, so they can spend more time on the things no model can replicate: mentoring students, building confidence and coaching young people through setbacks. Alpha School co-founder MacKenzie Price has been making this argument for years. In announcing the premiere, she said the industry keeps asking the wrong question. The point, in her telling, is not whether AI will replace teachers but that it is already absorbing routine tasks and pushing the human role toward relationships, resilience and critical thinking.
The premiere ran as a free virtual watch party from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m. Pacific time, followed by a live discussion that brought some weight to the screen. Price was joined by Wendy Kopp, the founder of Teach For America and co-founder of Teach For All, along with three educators featured in the film: education consultant and Fulbright Scholar Samantha DePalo, licensed therapist and behavioral scientist Matthew Shenker, and Christie Ray, a veteran educator and former Florida Principal of the Year. Viewers could put questions to the panel directly, and the film is now available to stream on Alpha School’s YouTube channel.
Why Alpha has skin in this game
A documentary about AI making teachers more valuable is, of course, a convenient story for a school built on AI. Founded in 2014, Alpha compresses core academics into two hours a day of personalized, AI-driven instruction and fills the rest of the schedule with workshops on communication, leadership and life skills. The model has drawn national attention precisely because it reimagines what a teacher does all day. If software handles direct instruction, the adults in the building become coaches and motivators rather than lecturers, which is exactly the version of teaching the film celebrates.
That makes Teachers 2.0 part film, part manifesto. Kopp’s presence matters here. Teach For America has placed tens of thousands of teachers in American classrooms over more than three decades, and her willingness to headline the discussion signals that the conversation about AI-augmented teaching has moved well beyond the edtech bubble and into the mainstream of education leadership.
The numbers behind the anxiety
The timing is not accidental. Two weeks before the premiere, Microsoft released the third edition of its annual AI in Education Report, and the figures describe a profession changing faster than anyone is preparing it to. The survey of 3,345 students, educators and education leaders across six countries found that 92 percent of students and education leaders have already used AI for school-related purposes, along with 88 percent of educators. Yet 77 percent of students and 53 percent of educators say they have received no formal AI training at all.
Concerns follow the same pattern. Academic integrity worries 41 percent of students and 42 percent of educators, according to the report, and respondents on both sides want their institutions to offer recurring AI training rather than one-off workshops. Adoption, in other words, has sprinted far ahead of preparation, and the people inside classrooms know it.
What to watch
That gap is exactly the space Teachers 2.0 steps into. The film’s optimistic framing, teachers freed from drudgery to do deeply human work, only holds if schools actually invest in the training and guardrails that make it possible. Where that investment lags, AI in the classroom looks less like liberation and more like an unmanaged experiment on students.
The next test comes in September, when schools open for a new academic year and a summer’s worth of AI announcements meets actual classrooms. Whether Teachers 2.0 proves prophetic or promotional will be decided there, not on a livestream. For more coverage of AI in education, visit Mylistingo.







