two rose education

per aspera ad astra


This business is the low-cost private school corporation that has taken over public education services in many countries.
Although their cringe-inducing motto “Per Aspera Ad Astra” promises bright future for the students, in reality it is a grandiose scheme that uses specially designed tax loopholes to privatize all education in the US.
The company itself officially is a non-profit and tax-exempt, plus their board of directors have managed to pull in government subsidies due to their massive lobby in Washington.
The way TR operates is - they come to a region, make a scandal of how dismal the fund-starved public schools are. Then they offer a privatization of local schools for symbolic cost with promises to improve them and make the education “relevant to modern life”.
What this means is - everything stays the same but subjects that are being taught are now relevant to local companies. So that in the end students are narrowly educated in whatever local corporations need - warehouse operators, hospitality service etc.
The cost of education is really high but parents can enroll their kids for free with a contract that states that the graduate will work 5-10 years in the company that is bankrolling their education.
TR receives money from the companies for this service plus subsidies from government and has turned massive profit lately while not paying a dime in taxes.
TwoRoseEdu has privatized most of the US and Britain’s public schools and is currently in the process of assimilating Europe’s public education system.
Some criticize the system, arguing that it creates a “soft-serfdom” - keeping workforce in the loop and reducing possibility of switching employees.
Multiple influential think-tanks have dismissed the criticism though, pointing out that 21th century needs are not being covered by public education. Two Rose Edu finances most of these think-tanks.

“I think it’s clear that in 21th century the main driving force of progress and humanity is corporations,” says TwoRoseEdu CEO Pietra Ritterman. “And what they require is workforce that is specialized and helps them achieve those goals. Not someone who knows a little bit about everything but someone who knows how to operate warehouse equipment or..or code apps or..you know…”