The entrepreneur who's paying kids not to go to college

Peter Thiel

There’s been a lot of talk recently about whether it’s worth it to go to college, given the high cost and potentially heavy student loan burden that comes with that diploma.

Now, an entrepreneur has launched a fellowship that aims to test that theory by paying people not to go to school.

The co-founder of online pocketbook PayPal, Peter Thiel, on Wednesday announced the winners of a fellowship that will pay nearly two dozen students $100,000 not to attend college for two years.

The catch? (There’s always a catch.) The 20 Under 20 Thiel Fellowship winners have to spend the time working on their scientific and technical innovations. They’ll be aided by a host of high-profile advisors who will teach the kids about disruptive technologies, mentor them and provide support and training (but don’t call it school!).

These aren’t just any 20 people, of course.

The foundation’s website said the winners include Andrew Hsu, who started at the University of Washington at age 12 and was, at age 19, pursuing his Ph.D. at Stanford when he left to work on his startup.

Darren Zhu is dropping out of Yale to pursue his interest in synthetic biology, and 19-year-old Eden Full has already founded a solar energy startup. Laura Deming enrolled at MIT at age 14 and is working on ways to extend the human lifespan by hundreds of years.

Thiel announced the fellowship plan last fall, in a press release packed with quotes from tech luminaries who extolled the virtues of dropping out.

Thiel himself seems fairly convinced that his experiment could change the world – or at least empower someone else to. In a statement announcing the contest last fall, he noted some of the major technologies that had been developed by people who dropped out of school, and predicted that his group would do the same.

“The Thiel fellows will change the world and call it a senior thesis,” he said in the statement.

 

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This is a great way to get a point across. Mentoring to these young students will give in site to fresh new ideas. Just look at all the greats Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Sir Richard Branson all of whom where drop outs. History repeats itself and I believe that is what Mr. Thiel is trying to accomplish. I am 20 years old going to college working towards my AA in Business and I can assure you if there was a way out I would take an opportunity like this. Thank you.

    Reply#1 - Mon May 21, 2012 10:29 AM EDT

    This doesn't make sense at all, just saying, nothing is better than a solid education, besides a $100k scholarship for basically doing @!$%# @!$%# all, and following around some other retard who ACTUALLY got a solid education.

      Reply#2 - Thu Jun 14, 2012 11:37 PM EDT

      It is not a hoax, a scam but he is genuinely trying to explore the other route to creativity and innovation. The University (mafia mentality) establishment, have succeeded in implanting in our brains that university education is the only way, that the person would be recognized by the system. A friend of mine (he is a genius) had three academic degrees, and when I asked him why, he replied "so no one would accuse me: I am not educated". We are led to believe that universities are the hotbed of creativity and innovation, and this is far from the truth. Universities are the most autocratic, bureaucratic inefficient institutions. They talk about "University traditions" and they mean "rigidness" In the day and age of information technology, we should set ourselves free of this mafia that straightjackets the creativity of our youth. There must be another establishment, that should divorce itself from the "Great Tradition" I applaud Mr. Theil, (I am sure since he is a business man, he would benefit from the fruits of the creativity of the winners!) N. Younis, (PhD.!!!! for credibility only)

        Reply#3 - Mon Dec 10, 2012 5:11 AM EST
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