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  • - Humanity is entering some type of new phase.

  • Even something as light as YouTube,

  • when you really think about it,

  • it's going to go down in history with writing,

  • the printing press, as a new phase.

  • But at the same time,

  • the current form of education's about 200 years old.

  • Education is something that we just assume

  • because we all grew up in it.

  • Let's reimagine education.

  • Let's imagine what schooling could and should look like

  • given the needs of the future

  • and also the tools at our disposal.

  • With the Internet,

  • we can literally connect the world through learning.

  • I think I've always been drawn to science fiction

  • because it really does challenge you to think

  • how could the world be?

  • When the whole Khan Academy thing started to happen,

  • I think one of the unique things that, to some degree,

  • allowed me and Khan Academy to have our own lane

  • is that we started having

  • more of this almost science fiction view.

  • Hey, instead of Khan Academy just being a piece of software

  • or a piece of content, could it be the next Oxford,

  • the next Smithsonian?

  • Could it help us elevate to another level

  • so that the time we live in now feels like a dark ages

  • in a 100 years or 200 years?

  • My name is Sal Khan,

  • and I'm the founder and CEO of both

  • Khan Academy and Schoolhouse.world.

  • - Take a moment and remember your favorite teacher.

  • Now imagine that teacher could reach not 30 kids

  • in a classroom, but millions of students all over the world.

  • That's exactly what Sal Khan is doing on his website,

  • Khan Academy.

  • - Back in 2004, my family was visiting me in Boston,

  • and my aunt told me that my cousin

  • was having trouble in math.

  • And when I asked Nadia what was going on, Nadia said,

  • "I'm just not a math person."

  • When someone says, "I'm not good at math,"

  • I immediately think they just haven't looked at it

  • the right way or their self-esteem has been shot

  • because either they themselves have been telling themselves

  • or other people have been telling them

  • that they're not good at it.

  • And what I've seen over and over again,

  • it has nothing to do with innate ability.

  • So for the next several months, Nadia was in New Orleans,

  • I was in Boston, remotely tutoring her,

  • and I had five virtual classrooms,

  • which were essentially these digital scratchpads.

  • I could tell Nadia, "Meet me in classroom five."

  • And what that meant is I could be in Boston,

  • she was in New Orleans, but at classroom five,

  • we would hear each other's voices,

  • and if one of us wrote with a digital pen,

  • the other one would see it.

  • We started making progress.

  • She got caught up with her class.

  • She frankly got a little ahead of her class,

  • and by quirk of how my mind works,

  • I am always thinking,

  • "Well, hey, this is working for my cousin,

  • could it work for 10 cousins?

  • Hey, if it's working for them,

  • could it work for people who aren't my cousins?

  • Could it work for 10 million people?

  • Could it work for a billion people?"

  • So in 2009, I quit my day job.

  • I set it up as a not-for-profit with a mission

  • of free, world-class education for anyone anywhere.

  • A little delusional for a guy operating

  • out of a walk-in closet at the time.

  • And so, in that early version of Khan Academy,

  • I was imagining it would be a place where we can connect

  • as human beings and learn from each other.

  • Now, as Khan Academy grew,

  • and, you know, now it's 120 million registered users,

  • 20, 30 million come every month from all over the world,

  • we lost that person-to-person functionality,

  • but it's always been in the back of my mind.

  • And that's where Schoolhouse.world comes into the picture.

  • The pandemic hits,

  • and Khan Academy's traffic goes to the roof.

  • We've always known well before the pandemic

  • that small group tutoring is really the gold standard.

  • There's actually a lot of research papers

  • that even small group tutoring

  • by someone who learned the same material last semester

  • or last year can actually be highly effective,

  • and in some cases, even more effective.

  • And so I started reaching out to some friends and say,

  • "Couldn't we build a prototype of a platform

  • where folks who need help in a topic

  • could say they need help?

  • And that other people, high-quality, vetted tutors

  • could say, 'Yes, I could run a small group tutoring session

  • on that topic.' "

  • And by the end of the summer, it was working.

  • We were getting amazing stories.

  • 13 and 14-year-olds helping people

  • who are in their 50s try to get their high school diploma.

  • We're seeing people in very disparate conditions,

  • economic strata, life stages, cultures

  • being able to connect and empathize with each other

  • around meaningful work that matters for both of them.

  • We were seeing that it is actually possible

  • to scale up tutoring by leveraging people's willingness

  • to do good for others.

  • When Schoolhouse.world started,

  • I thought the game-changing aspect of it

  • would be that we have figured out a way

  • to scale high-quality tutoring.

  • But I actually think the real game-changer

  • is when we're able to connect with other human beings.

  • When that other human being genuinely says, "Thank you.

  • You just changed my life.

  • You just unlocked my mind.

  • I will never forget what you just did.”

  • - I like to think on multiple scales.

  • So, you know, to answer your question,

  • 1000 years, I don't know.

  • You know, with CRISPR and genetic engineering,

  • we might be able to download knowledge, take a pill,

  • who knows, we'll be in some virtual reality,

  • if assuming humanity keeps progressing.

  • But I think over the next, let's call it 30 to 50 years,

  • I think we're going to have a world where anyone

  • on the planet is going to have access

  • to all the core academic material

  • and non-academic material they need

  • to be a fully actualized person.

- Humanity is entering some type of new phase.

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