The Daily Telegraph

Forget Mars and cars, Musk has set up a secret school

Billionair­e businessma­n launches campus for child geniuses to mould them into ‘remarkable people’

- By Matthew Field

ELON MUSK, the billionair­e Tesla founder, invests in cars, rockets and tunnels and even hopes to colonise Mars, but he has one venture that he has kept secret at his Spacex campus. He has founded a school called Ad Astra, at his offices in Hawthorne, California, dedicated to child geniuses.

Unlike other schools in the US, its loose curriculum focuses on projects that most fascinate the entreprene­ur, from artificial intelligen­ce and machine ethics to robotics and coding.

In a move that might horrify some parents, there is no room for foreign languages or sport.

Musk founded the experiment­al school three years ago to “exceed traditiona­l school metrics on all relevant subject matter through unique projectbas­ed learning experience­s”, according to a regulatory filing document discovered by the tech website Ars Technica.

While he is normally happy to publicise his ventures, Ad Astra has been kept secret as a mostly private venture.

It educates children aged from seven to 14 and started with a class of eight, including Musk’s own children. It has since grown to around 40 students made up of gifted applicants and the children of Spacex employees.

According to the filing, the school is funded entirely by Musk. The document reveals that the school emphasises “ability over age” for group projects, with study of science, maths, engineerin­g and ethics.

It adds the school will develop “remarkable people imbued with a strong sense of justice”. It can cater for up to 50 students.

There is little else to even prove that the school exists. A website for Ad Astra has just a home page and one link, for children’s parents. In a rare interview last year, Joshua Dahn, the head teacher, revealed a few insights. According to him, the school day is from 8.30am to 3.30pm, although it is intensive with “no down time”. Classes focus on projects rather than discipline­s.

Students learn to code in multiple software languages. No spoken languages are taught, based on Musk’s belief that computers will soon help humans instantly communicat­e in any language. Sport is not on the timetable.

Children from seven to 14 work together. “We take the most precocious kid we can find who can keep up with kids who are a bit older,” said Mr Dahn, who described one problem-solving exercise, called “The Lake”, which involves students discussing a town with a factory that is polluting the local water and killing wildlife.

The factory employs everyone in town, and voters keep in power the politician­s who favour the factory. Students are asked: who is most to blame for the pollution – the voters, the politician­s or the factory owners? There are no grades awarded; children are simply given critical and honest feedback.

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