Thiel Fellows: $100K To Skip College And Build A Startup

First Posted: 08/24/2011 1:45 pm Updated: 10/24/2011 5:12 am

(Reuters - By Deborah L. Cohen) - Dale Stephens was homeschooled for most of his academic life, so when the 19-year-old was offered $100,000 to skip college and work on his startup, he jumped at the chance.

His decision was helped by the fact he had already dropped out of a post-secondary institution - Hendrix College in Conway, Arkansas - after just one semester to launch UnCollege (www.uncollege.org), a nonprofit that helps other teens educate themselves outside the conventional university system.

"I created my education, essentially hacked it by leveraging the resources of the world around me," said Stephens, who was homeschooled from grades six through 12 outside Davis, California. "You can do the same thing at the collegiate level."

Stephens, who started UnCollege last January and is also writing a book, is one of the young entrepreneurs selected to participate in the inaugural "20 Under 20" program created by PayPal founder Peter Thiel, now a prominent Silicon Valley venture capitalist.

Thiel, who runs the hedge fund Clarium Capital and is a managing partner in the VC firm The Founders Fund, in March introduced a program that lets self-starters like Stephens sidestep academics in favor of a hands-on approach.

"There are a lot of talented people for whom it makes sense to do something not entirely tracked," said Thiel, 43, who ironically earned both undergraduate and law degrees from Stanford University. "We wanted to encourage talented young people to explore some alternatives."

The 20 Under 20 initiative was born in part from Thiel's concern about the skyrocketing costs of higher education, as well as his belief that the status associated with some academic degrees has become more important than their educational underpinnings.

"It's unfortunate that we have this runaway credentialing process," said Thiel, who initially followed a conventional career path, pursuing jobs in law and on Wall Street before becoming an entrepreneur. In 1998, he co-founded online payments site PayPal, which was bought by eBay in 2002 for $1.5 billion. Thiel was also an early investor in the social networking site Facebook.

"When I look back, I was in this automatic default thing," he said of his academic choices. "Higher education, it becomes strangely this way that most people don't need to think about their lives - some sort of substitute for thinking about your future."

ENTREPRENEURIAL EDUCATION

Thiel, who has argued the U.S. needs to jumpstart technology innovation and investment, is giving the two-year fellows annual stipends of $50,000 with no strings attached to help get their projects off the ground. Many are sharing housing in the Bay Area, creating ad hoc learning communities.

From biotechnology and robotics to energy and IT, their initiatives include pie-in-the-sky ideas as diverse as decentralizing banking in the developing world to improving motors for electric cars - even extracting minerals from asteroids.

Whether or not Thiel's program helps to transform these ideas into successful ventures, it has sparked a larger debate over the value of a college education in the world of entrepreneurship, which takes many of its cues from the school of hard knocks.

"The jury is out and I'm slightly skeptical," said Steve Blank, a former Silicon Valley entrepreneur who teaches at Stanford and the University of California, Berkeley, but doesn't think business schools do a particularly good job of prepping students for start-up careers.

"To generalize that this is great or bad is missing the argument," said Blank, a Vietnam veteran who dropped out of the University of Michigan just short of earning a degree. Since then he has co-founded numerous tech companies, including Web startup E.piphany, which he led to a successful IPO in 1999 before retiring. "After seeing how people learn, you can't generalize what is great for one group is great for another."

"STOPPING OUT"

Thiel dismisses any criticism that the program encourages young people to take an easier path by forgoing college. He is quick to point out that the fellows, who were selected from more than 400 applicants, bring high levels of focus and determination.

"Dropping out has a whole connotation of dropping what you're doing and not doing anything," said Thiel, who prefers "stopping out." "We looked very hard at the motivational question."

Participants clearly require enthusiasm to make the most of what is arguably the greatest benefit of the program: access to more than 100 influential mentors from the ranks of West Coast tech entrepreneurs who are assisting with everything from business plans to networks that may lead to initial investment.

"They're absorbing everything fast," said mentor Barney Pell, a 43-year-old angel investor and founder of Powerset, a natural language search engine that was acquired by Microsoft. "They're young and they're raw, so there's a lot of stuff for them to learn, but they're learning machines."

Christopher Rueth, at 17 among the youngest of the fellows, fits the bill. Rueth's project began with the frustration he experienced in high school, where administrators placed restrictions on students' Internet use. He was eager to move to Palo Alto and get started on making the Internet more affordable to people throughout the world.

"In San Francisco I'm hoping to be hooked up with product development experts, product designers," he said. "A thing like the fellowship is good for the people who are ready for it."

For Stephens, Thiel's program offers an alternative to the expense and constraints of a traditional college degree.

"I've never been a conformist," he said, adding: "It's about bending the rules of the institution or the rules of society to meet your needs."

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NRAMember2008
USMC Veteran
04:54 PM on 08/30/2011
Another easy way out that will turn out not so easy in the long run. I'm a business owner, and can tell you all first hand that college prepares you for that future indeavor.
01:24 PM on 08/30/2011
A buck says that these kids eventually do end up in a college somewhere desparately taking courses they need to stay in business such as finance, accounting, management, etc. Then they will know just how much they passed up for the quick draw McGraw act that was handed to them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bryneen Gary
No cash no post
12:26 PM on 08/26/2011
Sounds Like a Good Idea
I Love School and Like to be Challenged
So, I would take the Money and Go to School
But Work the Small Business on the Side
10:00 PM on 08/24/2011
STOP GIVING BILLION $$$$$$$$ CORPORATIONS, SUBSIDIES.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joseph Leslie
08:52 PM on 08/24/2011
We are sacrificing quality made products for the lure of cheap prices. I am 63 years old. When I got my Lionel and American Flyer train sets (both made in the USA), I was 8 years old. I still have them and they work! I bought my son a Bachmann Train set (Bachmann used to be made in Germany, but now is made in the People's Republic of China) for Christmas 2 years ago, I expected to find the same quality as my USA made trains sets. The train set was opened on Christmas Day and had stopped working before New Years Day. I returned the train set to WalMart and waited in the customer service line while the women Customer Service clerks compared fake fingernails. I finally got a replacement Bachmann train set and took it home and set it up. Once again the train set failed in less than 2 weeks! I then noticed that it was made in the People's Republic of China. If we continue to buy this CRAP from the People's Republic of China we create no jobs here in the USA and we continue to reward manufacturers for a job "noy well done"! If we start moving the production of our outsourced jobs back to the USA, we should start seeing real job creation and economic growth. How do laid off USA workers afford the cheap People's Republic of China manufactured products, when the laid off USA workers have no spendable income?
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DiamondDreams
I said it.
09:05 PM on 08/27/2011
Ok, my six year old son asked me, being that he can now read the print on his toys and everything else, "Mommy, why is everything made in China?". ..."uhm...well son...."
05:42 PM on 08/24/2011
hope he NEVER wants a government job, or one with a major corporation....their HR folks will not even let you apply without a college degree.
Tara Hunkoff
I could have been Sheila Noyeau
09:07 PM on 08/25/2011
That's why big companies are no better than big governments.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tolerantvoice
03:46 PM on 08/24/2011
I hope one of the first things this college teaches is that there will be no significant job creation in the US until products SOLD in the US must endure the costs mandated by congress for products MADE in the US. Offshore producers should pay the Federal Minimum wage of $7.25 per hour, plus SS & Medicare co-pays (for the offshore workers retirement), plus workers comp (escrow money for offshore workers who get hurt on the job) plus environmental and safety costs (to keep the world clean and workers safe), and abide by US child labor laws.
FTAs, tax cuts and stimulus programs have all failed to produce jobs in the US. FTAs create offshore jobs, not domestic jobs, tax cuts give individuals more money to spend on offshore products as does stimulus programs. The reason is that there are no US produced products for sale in retail stores in the US. No Multinational will invest in the US when any product contemplated can be made for $14.00 for a 12 hour day in China or 50 cents an hour in Indonesia. Until products SOLD in the US must endure the costs mandated by congress for products MADE in the US, there will be no job creation and no jobs for this college's graduates.