"I want my daughter to have the best education so she is ready for the world."
So writes Dr. Drew Pinsky on his blog, and that's exactly what he's hoping her future will look like.
In an op-ed for the New York Times, Pinsky makes the case that today's education system is falling behind, and that the best way to catch up is to incorporate "new methods or practices" into it.
In his piece, he lays out a number of ways that can be done, from using technology in the classroom to bringing in outside experts to help with subjects like reading and math, to incorporating home-based learning into the mix, to even pairing teachers and students so that one gets the credit for the other's work.
Of course, there's another side to all this, and it's a side that's not exactly well-known.
Pinsky is the co-founder and CEO of education start-up Picower, which bills itself as "the world's first education tech company."
It was founded by Pinsky's ex-wife, Picower co-founder Barbara Picower, and the two have worked together on other education-related projects, including the Picower Early
A customized collection of grant news from foundations and the federal government from around the Web.
Caroline Diehl is a serial social entrepreneur in the impact media space. She is Executive Chair and Founder of the UK’s only charitable and co-operatively owned national broadcast television channel Together TV, the leading broadcaster for social change runs a national TV channel in the UK and digital platform which helps people find inspiration to do good in their lives and communities.