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Problem 7: Free School Curriculum

Problem 7: Schools
According to a Business Insider report in 2018, the U.S. ranked 38th in math scores and 24th in science. Globally 2/3rds of children in school will not reach the minimum proficiency in reading. Also, 60% of school adolescents do not grasp what they are learning. 40% of children with disabilities in low and middle-income countries cannot read correctly. Since education is correlated to the economy, developing country school systems have nothing to lose with models like Play2Learn.
Market size:
The global gamified education market was pegged at $860.13M in 2021, poised to reach $11671.18M by 2030, at a CAGR of 33.61%. 74% of teachers have digital game-based learning to improve their teaching. 93% of class time is spent on class work using game-based knowledge.
Solution Q4 2023:
The free gamified education path underwritten by brands helps developing countries that can’t afford it—the first government will sign on within 24 months after a 12-month sale cycle and trial. After a successful case study in a developing country for six months, we will expand our marketing efforts to developed countries in 2025.
Under exceptional cases and not the focus of Play2Learn, the same model can be given to developed countries with grant funds that don’t want brands to incentivize learning but create internal rewards and private servers. Understanding gamified education is exponentially more efficient than most current education systems. It is not a one size fits all solution. Knowing the future of the internet is web3, even the height of education expertise in Finland could devote 5% of their curriculum to play2learn's web3 gamified education, knowing it connects them to the rest of the world, learning what they don’t know.