Thiel Fellowship
The Thiel Fellowship (originally named 20 under 20) is a fellowship created by billionaire Peter Thiel through the Thiel Foundation. The fellowship is intended for students aged 22 or younger and offers them a total of $100,000 over two years, as well as guidance and other resources, to drop out of school and pursue other work, which could involve scientific research, creating a startup, or working on a social movement. Selection for the fellowship is through a competitive annual process, with about 20–25 fellows selected annually.
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Type | Fellowship |
---|---|
Funded by | Peter Thiel through the Thiel Foundation |
Leadership | Allyson Dias |
Amount | US$100,000 |
Frequency of selection | Annual |
Number of recipients | 20–25 per year |
Website | thielfellowship |
History
Peter Thiel announced the fellowship at TechCrunch Disrupt in September 2010.[1] The first round of fellows, based on applications made at the end of 2010, was announced in May 2011.[2][3] The second round of fellows, based on applications made at the end of 2011, was announced in June 2012.[4][5] That year, the fellowship launched a website called "20 Under 20 Documentary Series" that features an online documentary series of four Thiel Fellowship recipients.[6][7]
The third class (announced in May 2013) included 22 fellows working on projects from garment manufacturing and B2B web products to ARM powered servers and biomedicine. The class included 7 fellows from outside of the US.[8]
In December 2013, a Wall Street Journal article summarized the Thiel Fellowship up until that point: "64 Thiel Fellows have started 67 for-profit ventures, raised $55.4 million in angel and venture funding, published two books, created 30 apps and 135 full-time jobs, and brought clean water and solar power to 6,000 Kenyans who needed it."[9]
The 2014 Thiel Fellows were announced in June 2014.[10] In July, organizers stated in 2014 that they wanted to include more women among selectees.[11]
Reception
Initial reception
Thiel's announcement of the Thiel Fellowship met with a diverse array of responses. Some, such as Jacob Weisberg, criticized Thiel's proposal for its utopianism and attack on the importance of education.[12] Others, such as Vivek Wadhwa, expressed skepticism about whether the success or failure of the Thiel Fellowship would carry any broader lessons regarding the value of higher education or the wisdom of dropping out.[13]
In May 2011, shortly after the announcement of the first batch of Thiel Fellows, the admissions office at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) congratulated two MIT students for receiving the Thiel Fellowship. Both students would need to drop out of MIT to receive the fellowship, but would be able to return to MIT to resume their studies after completing the two-year term of the fellowship if they so desired.[14]
Later reception
A year after the announcement of the first batch of Thiel Fellows, opinions on the program ranged from the skeptical and critical to the laudatory and optimistic.
In 2012, Eric Markowitz offered a mixed review of the Thiel Fellowship in Inc. magazine.[15]
In 2013 the program attracted criticism for its limited results. In April, an article by Richard Nieva for PandoDaily took a close look at how the first batch of Thiel Fellows had fared, finding that some had succeeded and others planned to return to school in the fall once their two years were up.[16] In September, academic Vivek Wadhwa wrote that the Thiel Fellowship had failed to produce any notable successes to date, and even its limited successes were instances where the Thiel Fellows were working in collaboration with more experienced individuals.[17] Also in October, former Harvard University President Larry Summers said at The Nantucket Project conference: "I think the single most misdirected bit of philanthropy in this decade is Peter Thiel's special program to bribe people to drop out of college."[18][19][20] A Thiel Fellow and a mentor for the Thiel Fellowship subsequently published an op-ed response in TechCrunch, restating the Thiel Fellowship's thesis and arguing that a four-year liberal arts education was becoming less relevant.[21]
Recipients
Notable recipients
Notable recipients include the following people (year they were awarded the fellowship is indicated in parentheses):[22]
- Laura Deming (2011) – founder and partner at Longevity Fund
- Paul Gu (2011) – co-founder and head of product at Upstart[23]
- James Proud (2011) – founder of Hello, which made Sense, a sleep tracking device[24][25]
- Dale J. Stephens (2011) – founder of Year On, formerly UnCollege, a gap year program with training in work skills and life skills[26]
- Dylan Field (2012) – co-founder and CEO of Figma[27]
- Taylor Wilson (2012) – the second youngest person to produce nuclear fusion[28]
- Ritesh Agarwal (2013) – founder & CEO of OYO Rooms
- Austin Russell (2013) – founder and CEO of Luminar Technologies and the world's youngest self-made billionaire as of 2021[29]
- Vitalik Buterin (2014) – co-creator of Ethereum[30]
- Stacey Ferreira (2015) – co-founder of Forge, a platform for gig workers
- Simon Tian (2015) – creator of the Neptune Pine, a crowd-funded smartwatch
- Cathy Tie (2015) – founder of Ranomics and Partner at Cervin Ventures[31]
- Boyan Slat (2016) – founder and CEO of The Ocean Cleanup[32]
- Robert Habermeier (2018) – co-creator of Polkadot[33][34]
- Erin Smith (2019) – creator of software to detect Parkinson's Disease
References
- Siegler, MG (2010-09-27). "Peter Thiel Has New Initiative To Pay Kids To "Stop Out Of School"". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2012-06-23.
- Wauters, Robin (2011-05-25). "Young Entrepreneurs Rule: Meet Peter Thiel's First 20 under 20 Fellows". TechCrunch.
- Wieder, Ben (2011-05-25). "Thiel Fellowship Pays 24 Talented Students $100,000 Not to Attend College". Chronicle of Higher Education.
- "Peter Thiel Announces 2012 Class of 20 Under 20 Thiel Fellows". Thiel Fellowship website. 2012-06-13. Archived from the original on 2012-11-13.
- Cutler, Kim-Mai (2012-06-14). "Nuclear Fusion, 3D Printing, Biomedical Imaging: What Thiel's New 20 Under 20 Fellows Are Attacking". TechCrunch.
- "About the Series: 20 under 20". The Thiel Foundation. 2012. Archived from the original on 18 October 2013. Retrieved 2013-04-20.
- "20 Under 20 Documentary Highlights Entrepreneurial Potential of Education Dropouts". eduinreview.com. Education in Review. 23 Aug 2012. Retrieved 8 Jun 2018.
- "This Year's Thiel Fellows Include A Fashion Designer, A Poet, And A Harvard Dropout". 2013-05-13.
- Kolodny, Lora (December 18, 2013). "Why a Nonprofit Backs Dropping Out of School: PayPal Founder's Foundation Encourages Learning by Doing". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved January 28, 2014.
- "20 Teens Win $100K: Announcing the 2014 Thiel Fellows". TechCrunch. June 5, 2014. Retrieved June 12, 2014.
- "Thiel Fellowship Aims to Close the Gender Diversity Gap". 25 July 2014.
- Weisberg, Jacob (2010-10-18). "What's Wrong with Silicon Valley Libertarianism". Newsweek. Retrieved 2010-10-19.
- Wadhwa, Vivek (2011-04-12). "Friends Don't Let Friends Take Education Advice From Peter Thiel". TechCrunch.
- McGann, Mike (2011-05-26). "Incentive to Drop Out". MIT Admissions Blog. Retrieved 2012-06-23.
- Markowitz, Eric (2012-10-16). "Examining the Thiel Fellowship: Is It Worthwhile?". Inc Magazine. Retrieved 2012-11-27.
- Nieva, Richard (April 24, 2013). "Examining the Thiel Fellowship: Where are they now?". PandoDaily. Archived from the original on June 23, 2015. Retrieved June 23, 2015.
- Wadhwa, Vivek (2013-09-11). "Billionaire's Failed Education Experiment Proves There's No Shortcut To Success". Forbes. Retrieved 2013-09-15.
- Ferenstein, Gregory (October 10, 2013). "Thiel Fellows Program Is 'Most Misdirected Piece Of Philanthropy', Says Larry Summers". Retrieved April 14, 2014.
- Tiku, Nitasha (October 11, 2013). "Summers: Thiel Fellows Is 'Most Misdirected Piece Of Philanthropy'". Archived from the original on April 15, 2014. Retrieved April 14, 2014.
- Weinstock, Samuel Y. (October 14, 2013). "Summers: Thiel Fellowship 'The Single Most Misdirected Bit of Philanthropy in This Decade'". The Harvard Crimson. Retrieved April 14, 2014.
- Silver, Darrell; Friedman, Dan (October 13, 2013). "Of Course Harvard's Larry Summers Hates The Thiel Fellowship". TechCrunch. Retrieved April 14, 2014.
- Thiel Fellowship website: Meet the Fellows
- "Upstart". Upstart. Retrieved 2021-08-17.
- Solomon, Brian. "Peter Thiel's Chosen One: This 25-Year-Old CEO Wants To Make Sleep A Billion-Dollar Business". Forbes. Retrieved 2022-01-05.
- Belvedere, Matthew J. (2017-03-19). "Sleep that makes 'Sense': The young CEO who built a $250 million dream". CNBC. Retrieved 2022-01-05.
- "Dale Stephens: 'Unschoolers create their education'". Washington Post. 2012-08-12.
- "Austin Russell", TechCrunch, retrieved May 20, 2021
- "The Boy Who Played With Fusion". Popular Science. Retrieved 2017-08-07.
- "Austin Russell". Forbes. Retrieved 2021-01-05.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - Snyder, Benjamin (2017-06-23). "Meet Vitalik Buterin, the 23-year-old founder of bitcoin rival ethereum". CNBC. Archived from the original on 2018-01-29. Retrieved 2018-03-08.
- "Cervin Team – Cervin Ventures". www.cervinventures.com. Retrieved 2018-11-17.
- CNBC.com, Susan Caminiti, special to (2017-04-22). "Thiel, Benioff backing 22-year-old's dream to clean up world's oceans". Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- "Polkadot Network".
- "Polkadot Developer Robert Habermeier Wins Prestigious Thiel Fellowship".