Counter-colleges
What can higher education learn from tech company fellowships?
For 15 years, technology companies have been awarding fellowships to highly talented young people on the premise that they drop out of or skip college. These programs benefit from the mounting suspicion that the long, expensive road through traditional higher education, even at premier institutions, is no longer a worthwhile endeavor. Polemics against academia are clearly evident in how these initiatives describe themselves. The Palantir Meritocracy Fellowship, for instance, characterizes college as „four years of prerequisites, debt, and indoctrination,“ while the same firm’s Neurodivergent Fellowship posting pointedly notes that it isn’t „a diversity initiative.“
It’s easy to dismiss the “Palantir degree” as a recruitment tool wrapped in cultural criticism—one that fails to reflect on its own ideological bias and paints an oversimplified picture of academia. Yet it is equally clear that the provocations hit on real weaknesses; the fact that gifted young people respond so strongly to these offers cannot be attributed to career advancement alone.
Palantir CEO Alex Karp frames the programs—which cannot scale as educational models due to their highly selective admissions process—as a form of external pressure intended to trigger reforms in traditional educational pathways. To assess their inspirational value, a detailed look at the various programs is inevitable.
The Thiel Fellowship
Launched in 2011, the Thiel Fellowship offers people under the age of 23 the opportunity “to receive a $250,000 grant and support from the Thiel Foundation’s network of founders, investors, and scientists” if they “skip or stop out of college.”
The approach highlights the role of mentors and replaces extensive preparation with learning through „building.“
Palantir fellowships
Meritocracy Fellowship
The Palantir Meritocracy Fellowship, awarded for the first time in 2025, is academically more ambitious than Thiel’s offer to drop out. Before the 22 fellows begin their practical training, they complete a four-week curriculum consisting of lectures delivered by „world-class historians, philosophers, scientists, writers, and technologists,“ discussions, readings, and excursions. The Wall Street Journal reports:
“Questions the company hoped the seminars would answer for the fellows included: What is the West? What are its challenges and how do we think through them? And, perhaps most important, is the West worth defending? (...) The fellows read the autobiography of Frederick Douglass, took an improv-themed class on how to think on one’s feet and present oneself in the workplace, and went on field trips, including to the site of the Civil War’s Battle of Gettysburg in Pennsylvania.“
If you believe the reports published on the website, a speaker spends six to eight hours with the students, presenting mindsets rather than just facts. They emphasize a diversity of viewpoints as well as open and rigorous debate. The mission, though, is beyond dispute:
“The Meritocracy Fellowship combines grounding in the ideas that animate the West with building the software that defends it.“
Palantir’s head of talent, Margaret ‘Marge’ York, emphasizes the importance of practice despite the intellectual foundation (“Study everything from Plato to software architecture.”):
“The ones that really differentiated themselves from the pack are doers. They’re builders, and they’re just deeply inclined to get hands on.“
Neurodivergent fellowship
In addition to the Meritocracy Fellowship and the project-oriented American Tech Fellowship aimed at those with prior experience, Palantir has recently started offering the Neurodivergent Fellowship – “no formal diagnosis or disclosure required.”
This program is based on the premise that „neurodivergent individuals will play a disproportionate role in shaping the future of America and the West.” Why? The company believes these people excel in pattern recognition, non-linear thinking, and hyperfocus: „The cognitive traits that make the neurodivergent different are precisely what make them exceptional in an AI-driven world.“
Rick Rubin Summer AI Sensei
Y Combinator, the venture capital firm, is currently featuring a unique job ad on its site. Music producer and creativity guru Rick Rubin is seeking an AI tutor to live with him in his villa in Tuscany for a month this summer:
“Days would be a mix of hands-on teaching, building little experiments together, and just vibing on what’s possible when taste meets technology.“
The expectations he has for his „sensei“ are revealing:
“You’re an exceptional teacher: patient, clear, fun, and able to make the complex exciting.“
Takeaways
The programs share many traits with Ivy League institutions, including a highly gifted peer group, mentorship from experts, academic formats such as lectures, readings, and excursions, as well as an emphasis on open, intimidation-free discussion. The latter, especially, is clearly a response to “wokeness,” as is the focus on content centered around “the ideas that animate the West.”
Things get more interesting when the programs reflect the challenges AI poses to higher education. The focus on teaching mindsets and cognitive capabilities (pattern recognition, non-linear thinking, hyperfocus) rather than just facts points in this direction, as does the preference for learning through real-world projects, where new knowledge is created in the first place.
It is doubtful that four weeks are enough to lay the intellectual foundation for high-impact activities like Palantir’s. This does not, however, mean that academia doesn’t have to take counter-colleges seriously. Rather, they should be observed with the same balance of scrutiny and willingness to learn as rigorous Great Books programs and other attempts to revitalize the humanities.


