Home BreakingThe Midnight Problem: One Startup’s Plan to Give Every Student a Private Tutor

The Midnight Problem: One Startup’s Plan to Give Every Student a Private Tutor

by Joseph Wilson
2 minutes read

An education technology startup, Secondesk is offering free AI voice tutoring to five universities—and betting it can change who actually finishes college

It’s 11pm. A single mother has just gotten her kids to bed after a double shift. She has a chemistry exam in a few hours, and she’s stuck on a concept that could make or break her grade. At Princeton, a student in the same situation could walk into a tutoring center still open for another hour, or text a private tutor who charges $100 to be on call. At most community colleges, that same student has one option: figure it out alone.

South Florida-based Secondesk wants to eliminate that gap entirely.

The AI voice tutoring startup announced this week that it will give five universities a fully customized AI tutor—completely free—for the entire 2026-2027 academic year. Each school chooses their highest-need subject and their preferred language from more than 20 options. From there, every enrolled student gets unlimited access, 24 hours a day, for the full year.

The catch? There isn’t one—but there is a priority list.

Secondesk is specifically targeting the schools whose students have been locked out of premium academic support for generations: Hispanic-Serving Institutions, Historically Black Colleges and Universities, Tribal Colleges and Universities, community colleges, and schools where most students qualify for Pell Grants.

The timing is intentional. National data shows that roughly 40 percent of students who drop out of college cite lack of academic support as a factor. These aren’t students who can’t handle the material. They’re students who hit a wall at the wrong moment, couldn’t find help, failed one critical exam, lost their financial aid, and never recovered.

“The difference between dropping out and earning a degree often comes down to one moment and whether anyone is there to help,” the company stated.

Secondesk’s platform isn’t a ChatGPT-based chatbot. It’s a voice-based AI tutor that students actually talk to—designed to feel like a conversation with a knowledgeable friend rather than typing into a search bar at 2am.

University administrators can apply by emailing kristy@secondesk.ai to express interest before the March 1, 2026 deadline. Selected schools will be announced March 15.

More information at www.Secondesk.ai.

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