Andrew Young
Update: 2013-08-14
Description
Salman Khan founded the nonprofit Khan Academy with
the mission of providing free, high-quality education for ’źanyone, anywhere’Ź in the
world. Born in Metairie, Louisiana, to immigrant parents from India and
Bangladesh, Khan graduated from MIT in 1998 with three degrees: one bachelor of
science in mathematics; another in electrical engineering and computer science;
and a master's in electrical engineering.
After MIT, Khan worked in Silicon Valley at the height of the tech boom. When the
bubble burst in 2000, he enrolled in Harvard Business School. After earning a
master's in business administration, he became an analyst at a Boston-based
hedge fund. The following year, as a side project, he began tutoring a young
cousin in math, communicating by phone and using an interactive notepad. When
others expressed interest in this method of instruction, he began posting videos of
his hand-scribbled tutorials on YouTube. Demand took off, and in 2009 he quit his
day job to commit himself fully to the not-for-profit Khan Academy.
In October 2010, Khan was listed in Fortune’Ŵs annual ’ź40 Under 40,’Ź which
recognizes business’Ŵs hottest rising stars, as well as Fast Company’Ŵs list of the
’ź100 Most Creative People in Business.’Ź He was recently profiled by 60 Minutes
and recognized by Time magazine as one of the 100 most influential people in the
world. His first book, The One World Schoolhouse: Education Reimagined, was
published this month.
the mission of providing free, high-quality education for ’źanyone, anywhere’Ź in the
world. Born in Metairie, Louisiana, to immigrant parents from India and
Bangladesh, Khan graduated from MIT in 1998 with three degrees: one bachelor of
science in mathematics; another in electrical engineering and computer science;
and a master's in electrical engineering.
After MIT, Khan worked in Silicon Valley at the height of the tech boom. When the
bubble burst in 2000, he enrolled in Harvard Business School. After earning a
master's in business administration, he became an analyst at a Boston-based
hedge fund. The following year, as a side project, he began tutoring a young
cousin in math, communicating by phone and using an interactive notepad. When
others expressed interest in this method of instruction, he began posting videos of
his hand-scribbled tutorials on YouTube. Demand took off, and in 2009 he quit his
day job to commit himself fully to the not-for-profit Khan Academy.
In October 2010, Khan was listed in Fortune’Ŵs annual ’ź40 Under 40,’Ź which
recognizes business’Ŵs hottest rising stars, as well as Fast Company’Ŵs list of the
’ź100 Most Creative People in Business.’Ź He was recently profiled by 60 Minutes
and recognized by Time magazine as one of the 100 most influential people in the
world. His first book, The One World Schoolhouse: Education Reimagined, was
published this month.
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