Knewton Explained

Knewton, Inc.
Type:Private
Industry:Education Technology
Key People:Brian Kibby (CEO)
Ryan Prichard (CTO President)
Jennifer Grunebaum (CFO)Jose Ferreira (Founder)
Services:Infrastructure platform for adaptive learning
Num Employees:150
Foundation:2008
Location:New York, NY
Homepage:knewton.com

Knewton is an adaptive learning company that has developed a platform to personalize educational content as well as has developed courseware for higher education concentrated in the fields of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. The company was founded in 2008 by Jose Ferreira, a former executive at Kaplan, Inc. The Knewton platform allows schools, publishers, and developers to provide adaptive learning for any student. In 2011, Knewton announced a partnership with Pearson Education to enhance the company's digital content, including the MyLab and Mastering series.[1] Additional partners announced include Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Macmillan Education, Triumph Learning, and over a dozen others.[2] [3] [4]

Knewton's headquarters are at 440 Park Avenue South in Manhattan, New York City. The company also has an office in Tech City, London.

Description

Knewton is an adaptive learning technology provider that makes it possible for others to build adaptive learning applications. In 2016, the company also began developing courseware for higher education classes using content from educational companies and open educational resources. Knewton technology enables the company to perform "sophisticated, real-time analysis of reams of student performance data."[5] Knewton uses adaptive learning technology to identify each student's particular strengths and weaknesses. Concepts are tagged at very specific levels, which allows the platform to make custom recommendations based on students’ proficiency and needs. The company first launched with a GMAT preparation course,[6] which has now been discontinued.[7]

In 1995, researchers now working for Knewton proved that the small question pool available to the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) computer-adaptive test made it vulnerable to cheating.[8]

In January 2011, Arizona State University began running developmental math and blended learning courses using Knewton's adaptive technology.[9] "The portion of students withdrawing from the courses fell from 13% to 6%, and pass rates rose from 66% to 75%".[10]

Funding history

In its first round of funding, Knewton raised $2.5 million in investment capital from Accel Partners, Reid Hoffman, Ron Conway, and Josh Kopelman at First Round Capital.[11] In April 2009 Knewton closed a $6 million round of funding led by Bessemer Venture Partners with returning investors,[12] and in April 2010 Knewton closed a $12.5 million round of funding led by FirstMark Capital with returning investors.[13] In October 2011 the company closed a $33 million series D round of funding led by the Founders Fund.[14] In December 2013 the company closed a $51 million series E round of funding led by Atomico, joined by GSV Capital and returning investors.[15] In February 2016, Knewton closed a series F $52 million round, its largest to date, led by Sofina and Atomico.[16]

In May 2019, Wiley acquired the assets of Knewton.[17] Financial terms of the deal were not initially disclosed, but a quarterly earnings report indicated that Knewton was acquired for less than $17 million.

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Pearson, Knewton Team Up To Personalize College. Bruce. Upbin. October 31, 2011. 2011-11-02. Forbes.
  2. News: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Knewton Partner To Offer Blended K-12 Math Program. June 10, 2013. 2014-10-15. THE Journal.
  3. News: Knewton teams up with Macmillan to bring adaptive learning beyond K-12 and higher ed. Ki Mae. Heussner. May 21, 2013. 2013-05-28. GigaOm.
  4. News: Knewton partners with Triumph Learning, takes first steps into K-12 space. March 5, 2013. 2013-05-28. EdSurge.
  5. News: The Adaptive Learning Revolution. Kayla. Webley. June 6, 2013. 2013-06-13. TIME.
  6. Web site: "Knewton GMAT Prep Course", About.com, January, 2009 . February 23, 2009 . February 16, 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090216000814/http://businessmajors.about.com/od/satgmatpreparation/a/KnewtonInt.htm . dead .
  7. Web site: Score 50 Points Higher on the GMAT or Your Money Back - Knewton Test Prep . www.knewton.com . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20081019114948/http://www.knewton.com/GMAT . 2008-10-19.
  8. News: Computer Admissions Test to Be Given Less Often. William. Honan. January 4, 1995. 2009-06-30. New York Times.
  9. News: Is the Google-fication of education underway?. Scott. Olster. January 7, 2011. 2011-01-07. CNN Money. https://web.archive.org/web/20110108032553/http://tech.fortune.cnn.com/2011/01/07/is-the-google-fication-of-education-underway/. January 8, 2011. dead.
  10. News: Knewton Is Building The World's Smartest Tutor. Bruce. Upbin. February 22, 2012. 2011-03-16. Forbes.
  11. News: Knewton raises $2.5 million for education services software. Dean. Takahashi. May 17, 2008. 2009-02-02. Venture Beat.
  12. News: Knewton Bags $6 Million Series B Round For Adaptive Learning Platform. Robin. Wauters. April 7, 2009. 2009-04-07. TechCrunch.
  13. News: Educational Technology Company Knewton Scores $12.5 Million More. Robin. Wauters. April 19, 2010. 2010-04-19. TechCrunch.
  14. News: Founders Fund Leads $33 Million D Round in Learning Startup Knewton. Erick. Schonfeld. October 31, 2011. 2011-10-31. TechCrunch.
  15. News: Powering Smart Content For Publishing Giants, Knewton Lands $51M To Take Personalized Learning Global. Rip. Empson. December 19, 2013. 2014-01-20. TechCrunch.
  16. Web site: Knewton Closes a $52 Million Round to Grow Internationally (EdSurge News). 2016-02-04. en-US. 2016-07-19.
  17. Web site: Wiley buys Knewton, an adaptive learning technology company Inside Higher Ed. www.insidehighered.com. en. 2019-12-10.