How to start a school with your friends(prigoose.substack.com)
125 points by geverett 16 hours ago | 13 comments
yupitsme123 11 hours ago
I always wondered why no one creates new universities in the US. It seems like in the 1800s every rich guy started their own university, many with unique missions.

The existing university model in the US seems like it's ripe for disruption so I'm surprised no one has tried to create their own.

AbstractH24 8 minutes ago
America did try this with moderation with all the online certificate programs and self-directed learning in the 2010s.

It would be interesting to look at the impact, success, and failure.

typewithrhythm 10 hours ago
I'm guessing it's at least partially too high risk from a students perspective.

Much of the point of an established university is credentials, a new one cannot give the same recognition.

This means that to attract new students, and build a reputation, you have to have some other draw; either some world renowned experts, or cheap (even free or scholarships) tuition. Probably both.

And if you want your graduates to be outstanding, then you need to offer the best incoming candidates a reason to choose your school, because the truth is the school has less impact than the individual.

2arrs2ells 10 hours ago
You’re spot on. Bootstrapping a reputation is really hard (and expensive), and the very painful accreditation process makes it much harder (need students to get accredited, can’t offer degree to students without accreditation).

Two good colleges who’ve overcome the challenges recently are Olin (engineering school in Boston) and Minerva (globally distributed college).

econ 9 hours ago
I forget his name or even when an where it was or how it ended but some kid wanted to start his own school. People were skeptical to say the least but he put in the work.

It turned out more than a few professional teachers were more than a little bit tired of how things work in the usual institutions. You can't even call it new ideas I think, they knew exactly what was wrong. The funny part was that that automatically became the main selling point.

yupitsme123 10 hours ago
These are the sorts of hurdles that a wealthy, powerful, amd/or famous person could overcome. If Buffett University or Gates University opened tomorrow you'd have people clamoring to support it and attend it.

As for a draw, the US jniversity system is so flawed at this point that it wouldn't be hard to come up with something better.

corimaith 47 minutes ago
Also in the 1800s it was primarily other rich guys going in as part of their social upbringing, so it would be more like friends setting up a new social club.
MagicMoonlight 6 hours ago
Because it’s all about the brand, nobody wants to go to Gorben University.

They get created if there is specific market pressures I.e visa fraud. Then suddenly every ceramic and pottery class becomes a university.

vasco 3 hours ago
There's a bunch of new "universities" but they don't follow the old model, all those online learning platforms are the new wave of "universities". Khan academy, udemy, etc, for a while everyone was starting another platform like that. So I'd say we did already have a second wave of it. Probably a third wave with practically fully AI tutoring / coursework already starting.
technotony 8 hours ago
Peter diamondis and ray kerzweil tried with singularity University but the accreditation process priced to much.
SteveNuts 11 hours ago
It seems like all we’ve been able to do is churn out diploma mills with dubious (or outright fraudulent) accreditation.
vector_spaces 11 hours ago
Or predatory/misleading payment schemes, a la Lambda School
fallingknife 10 hours ago
What is predatory and misleading about it? I just looked it up and it's 17% of your next two years income. Seems pretty simple to me.
p00dles 6 hours ago
This thread is worth a read regarding Lambda school:

- https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40067939

- the “dupe” post with a title that specifically refers BloomTech aka Lambda School CEO Austen Allred being banned from all consumer-lending activities: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40071694

*edit to add “dupe” link.

vector_spaces 3 hours ago
If it were that straightforward, then yes, I agree, but it wasn't, see e.g. [1] or the various articles written at the time

Quality of instruction was poor, instructors were often students from bootcamps with no work experience. They misrepresented the nature of the debt agreement that students were entering into:

> The contracts stated,[45] "this extension of credit is a qualified educational loan and is subject to the limitations on dischargeability in bankruptcy contained in Section 523(a)(8) of the United States Bankruptcy Code." This was false, and lead students to believe that it was impossible to discharge their debt.

It turned out that they sold the ISA contracts -- the "X% for next two years income" contracts -- to third parties before the students had finished their education. This means their claim about alignment of incentives with the student was bogus.

They ended up getting fined for deceptive practices by the US Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, also sued by former students for misrepresenting job placement rates (claiming 86% to prospective students but in internal memos claimed around 50%).

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloom_Institute_of_Technology#...

econ 9 hours ago
We should extort grown-ups to pay for the younglings. 1-2% of your earnings forever.

That way we get professionals who aren't a pack of hyenas looking to put the squeeze on everything an everyone. Those will rip you appart like a sheep with no effort at all.

photonthug 8 hours ago
About 1-2% of earnings forever, tech workers will be on a path for this anyway, it just won't pay for younglings at all. Suppose you need a bunch of certs to remain accredited in a competitive field. Several of the relevant certs are always expiring on any given year, the costs go up but the wages don't, and the field just gets more competitive so you need all the certs and a degree. If wages also go down because of AI, if you find it difficult to retire.. then yeah, even when you've paid in full for your education once already, you're kind of doomed to keep renting it. Employers tend tend to pay this (for now), but if you're ever not employed you'll have eat the costs yourself as a prerequisite for ever getting employed
fallingknife 8 hours ago
I neither have a CS degree nor have ever got a single certification and it's never hurt my ability go get SWE jobs, so I really don't know what you are talking about.
photonthug 8 hours ago
You may never be affected, it depends on what you do and how we as an industry decide to approach credentialism in the future. From the standpoint of many vendors though, it's just another possible source of revenue, so they aren't going to just leave the money on the table if they can find any way around it. Employers already have LOTS of applications for every job and are happy to filter with useless bullshit whether it makes sense or not.

I'd say it's currently the worst for SecOps people, senior data-engineers working closely with infrastructure, cloud engineers who specifically prefer to not focus on one platform, etc. Three main clouds each offering many cert levels, plus the major vendors in your adjacent spaces, it can add up pretty quick.

And just to be clear.. keeping up with changes is something I do consider table-stakes for working with tech. But I really do not like the hassle/expense of yet another bullshit administrative burden forever when life is full of such things as it is.

fallingknife 10 hours ago
The university accreditation system is a cartel. You can't gain accreditation until you have already graduated students! So basically you have to find a group of students who are willing to risk studying at an unofficial university, then operate the university for several years before you can even apply for the stupid credential that allows you to issue degrees that anybody else recognizes. It clearly should be illegal, but like in so many other areas, the university system gets special treatment while continuing to suck up more and more resources for an ever diminishing return.
colechristensen 5 hours ago
Here's the question: who cares about accreditation?

I'm not trying to be flippant, this is an actual question.

Sure, getting a higher degree at another institution will have that requirement, as would a professional certification (medicine, law, professional engineering), but those are relatively narrow scopes.

Isn't it true that in most cases nobody is going to care or even know enough to check accreditation?

dangus 3 hours ago
Maybe this is news to people in the software industry, but a whole bunch of highly regulated (for good reasons) industries like medicine, teaching, and industries reworking professional licenses industries like civil engineering.

You don’t want someone designing a bridge, performing open heart surgery, or flying a plane with 300 people on it who were trained by unverified schools.

aleph_minus_one 2 hours ago
> You don’t want someone designing a bridge, performing open heart surgery, or flying a plane with 300 people on it who were trained by unverified schools.

The risk tolerance varies a lot between people.

dangus 1 hour ago
Sure, but you can logically figure out why many of those professions sought professional licensure and accreditation in the first place.

It’s the same concept as “regulations are written in blood.”

taormina 3 hours ago
I mean, Carnegie Mellon was #2 in computer science in the nation at one point despite not being an accredited program because of their lack of mandatory calculus requirements
0xDEAFBEAD 9 hours ago
Here are a couple of recently formed, Silicon Valley adjacent universities:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minerva_University

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Austin

alexashka 2 hours ago
Because we already have too many.

You should ask why we don't close them instead.

Would the world be a better or worse place if all university business programs were shut down tomorrow? Follow the thought regarding advertising, marketing and psychology.

android521 8 hours ago
The goal is never learning. You don't need to go to a university to learn effectively.It is credentials.
Onavo 8 hours ago
Trump?
watwut 3 hours ago
Trump created one. And he was not the only one. You just do not hear about them on the news all that often. Edit: I am not saying Trump created a good university. I am saying they exist and are created. They are not culturally important and often frauds.
monero-xmr 10 hours ago
Good teachers are expensive, but on top of that, so are all the facilities. Being accredited is required for Pell Grants and student loans. Can’t be accredited without a lot of horse shit like fully staffed research libraries loaded with books no one will ever read. Yet another higher ed racket
yupitsme123 9 hours ago
Who decides these standards and what right do they have to do so?

Also, are employers really looking into if a prospect's school was accredited or not?

baruz 46 minutes ago
> Who decides

Councils formed by the currently accredited schools decide.

> what right

The government started relying on these accrediting bodies with the GI Bill in 1952. They did not want the GIs to spend the money on bad educations.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Higher_education_accreditation...

> are employers really looking into

Didn’t yours? If they’re not body shops, companies will rely on the reputation of the school or pick out people from their own school. Unaccredited schools typically have poor reputations and usually churn out “graduates” who can’t attract the money to start businesses and hire people from those schools.

jbellis 12 hours ago
Love to see it!

Wonder how to reconcile the description of almost-negligible admin overhead with this description of a similar effort that warns, "We wanted to keep costs extremely low, so we had parent volunteers do all admin for the school. It's going really well, but it's an insane amount of work."

From my experience both teaching kids and organizing things, that seems like a much more likely outcome.

https://x.com/KelseyTuoc/status/1917287461027459239

CrazyStat 11 hours ago
FractalU isn't a school. It doesn't need to keep records, comply with miles of state regulations (employee and volunteer background checks, record keeping, mandatory exams, ...). It doesn't need to be able to demonstrate to other schools (or universities) what the students achieved. It doesn't need to demonstrate to the state that it's actually teaching the students something. It doesn't handle any money, so it doesn't need an accountant. It doesn't employ anyone. It doesn't need to worry about firing anyone.

My kids attended a small co-op school when they were young--5 employees (4 teachers + "director" who was mostly a floating assistant/substitute), everything else handled by parent volunteers. There's really an enormous amount of administrative overhead.

FractalU doesn't have any of that because it's not actually a school.

dangus 2 hours ago
As a note, they do handle money. They charge $600 for a course on how to replicate their community elsewhere. I don’t know about tuition for other courses because the links are broken.

Some skepticism for me creeps in the more I peruse the fractal sites. Course links for the summer semester are broken, and a lot of the working content seems to be somewhat self-indulgent, reading more like a normal unremarkable friend group.

The MLM/cult vibes I’m getting are that the main purpose and monetary incentive seems to be in the mere existence of the “community” itself, and selling that aspiration as a $600 course. The website for the course (fractalcampus.com) is a bog-standard tech startup marketing landing page including “as seen on…”, testimonials, and other calls to action to buy this $600 course.

Notable with that course, we are talking about a paid course being sold where the only person with a true success story is the person selling the course. The Boston iteration seems to only consist of a weekly dinner so far.

Doesn’t that sound familiar, like every other influencer selling a self-help course we’ve ever seen?

I think if the paid course and stated analogy to YCombinator wasn’t a part of it I would be more enthusiastic, like, “yeah this thing is awesome, a real community that goes deeper than small talk, you’re all getting together and learning from each other and truly engaging.” But then the more I think about what they’re actually doing as actions rather than words, the more I feel like this whole thing isn’t 100% honest.

The founders’ biographies support the idea that they are a tech couple who exited with lucrative equity and are now landlords as their main job and that this is a glorified real estate course. “Co-living” is just a drop-in word for “landlord.”

“FractalU isn't a business or a nonprofit. In fact, it's not a formal organization at all.”

I’d put five bucks down that there’s an LLC or trust involved somewhere.

Idk, maybe I’m reading too deep into this, but there are a lot of scams in this world and I think this might be one of them.

aleph_minus_one 11 hours ago
> There's really an enormous amount of administrative overhead.

What kind of work does this administrative overhead in particular consist of?

CrazyStat 11 hours ago
All the things I listed in the first paragraph.
The_Amp_Walrus 9 hours ago
a school is an institution that teaches people

your definition of "actually a school" seems to arbitrarily include a lot of reporting and paperwork and commerce that have nothing to do with the bit where you teach people stuff

wtroughton 45 minutes ago
Education does not operate in a vacuum. Many students are incentivized by the social accreditation of completing a program. Institutions need some way to qualify that teaching is actually being done. Whether it be an examination, a certification, or bringing a project to completion.
ndriscoll 1 hour ago
It sounds like this approach is more like home school pods whereas the person you quoted was trying to actually form a "school" and keep the state happy? If the focus is just on teaching, what kind of admin work is there to do? Since she says parents volunteered, I assume this is for kids, and operating under a homeschool model (i.e. the parents just tell the state they're the instructor) would be a viable way to avoid regulatory burden even if you hire an outside tutor/instructor.
maxverse 14 hours ago
The Recurse Center[1] folks (also YC) started an un-school with friends!

[1] http://recurse.com/

parpfish 10 hours ago
I’ve been intrigued by recurse for a long time because the alums I’ve met are all very impressive.

But when I think about applying, I worry that it’s just tapping into my addiction to external validation and credential-seeking rather than just learning something on my own.

Or… that’s what I tell myself because I’m not nearly as bright as the recursers I’ve met

ChrisMarshallNY 13 hours ago
That looks very cool.

As someone that has given a number of classes and seminars, it gets fairly discouraging, how few folks want to learn.

I think that establishing a learning-focused community (like this) would probably really get a lot of people engaged.

Geeks like learning. Many others don't. It's always fairly demoralizing, when I encounter it.

geverett 16 hours ago
A coliving house in NYC started a 'university' that has taught thousands of students in the last two years.
carom 14 hours ago
Any more details on this?
Jtsummers 13 hours ago
That's what the submitted link is about. GP posted a comment about the thing they submitted in addition to submitting it.
carom 12 hours ago
Ah, thank you. I had, admittedly, not read the article in OP. I thought this was very vaguely referencing another situation.
sirodoht 4 hours ago
I've been very inspired by FractalU. We've started something similar in London, UK, called Shoshin College [1]

[1] https://shoshincollege.org/

vianarafael 11 hours ago
This is such a refreshing inversion of the ‘edtech’ trend—rather than trying to scale education through software, FractalU scales motivation through community. Makes me wonder: instead of designing better UIs for MOOCs or LLM tutors, maybe the real unlock is designing better social containers for learning.
TimTheTinker 9 hours ago
> the real unlock is designing better social containers

FTFY.

Note - a lot of the classic social containers have been systematically disappearing since the 1970s in anything but rural areas for a variety of reasons. I'm not qualified to hypothesize the causes, but I do see the effects.

rahimnathwani 12 hours ago
I love these sort of 'high agency', 'you can just do stuff' posts.
aspenmayer 13 hours ago
sakesun 11 hours ago
Something to do while AI take care of other chores.
lakomen 6 hours ago
[dead]
fitsumbelay 14 hours ago
D O P E !
pcthrowaway 12 hours ago
I read "How to Live Near your Friends"[1] article linked from this article, and I can't help but be amused by the author's attitude of "my friends should all move near me because that's the way we can all live near friends"

I mean they're not wrong, but also they could have made friends with their neighbours like the Stoop Coffee[2] author, or moved to be nearer to a friend group also. It's nice to see them really embracing their main character bias though (in this case, in a way that seemed to have successfully built a geographically aligned community)

[1]: https://prigoose.substack.com/p/how-to-live-near-your-friend...

[2]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43473618

parpfish 10 hours ago
The thing that stuck out to me was that they said there were 22 friends nearby.

I have no idea how you’d maintain relationships with that many people that would be strong enough to justify “I’ll uproot my living situation to be by this person”. Maybe they actually just have 22 acquaintances that like their roommate matchmaking and apartment hunting skills?