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Palantir CEO:名校光环不再,专业技能和实践经验更重要
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Palantir首席执行官Alex Karp近期在一次采访中表示,传统的名校教育,特别是那些提供广泛但不够深入知识的教育,在当前快速变化的劳动力市场中可能不再是成功的保障。他认为,拥有特定领域专业知识和解决复杂实际问题的能力,比仅仅拥有常春藤盟校的学历更能带来高薪和职业成功。Karp以Palantir的“精英主义奖学金”项目为例,该项目吸引了大量高素质但未上大学的高中毕业生,旨在为他们提供实践机会,并暗示在Palantir工作本身就是一项顶尖的科技行业资历,远超传统的大学背景。他批评一些美国大学的录取标准不透明,缺乏真正的精英主义,并呼吁重视基于实际能力和成就的选拔。

🎓 名校光环褪色,实践能力凸显:Palantir CEO Alex Karp认为,即便拥有哈佛、耶鲁等名校的学历,在通用知识广泛但缺乏深度的情况下,也可能面临职业发展的挑战。他强调,在当今的劳动力市场,拥有具体的领域知识和解决实际复杂问题的能力,将比单纯的名校背景更能决定一个人的职业成就和收入潜力。

💡 技能导向的职业发展:Karp指出,那些能够独立解决技术难题,例如修复复杂设备问题的高中毕业生,将比仅拥有常春藤盟校文凭的人更有可能获得高薪。这表明,Palantir更看重的是个人在特定技术领域的实际操作能力和解决问题的效率,而非学历的标签。

🚀 Palantir的“精英主义奖学金”项目:为了吸引和培养具备实际能力的人才,Palantir推出了“精英主义奖学金”项目,该项目旨在招募高中毕业生,让他们直接进入公司参与实际项目,并有机会获得全职工作。此举不仅绕过了传统的大学教育体系,也传递了一个信息:在Palantir,工作经验和实际贡献比大学学历更具价值。

⚖️ 对大学教育的批判性审视:Karp批评了许多美国大学不透明的招生标准,认为这扼杀了真正的精英主义和卓越。他认为,一些大学的录取基于主观和肤浅的标准,导致有能力的学子被拒之门外,校园反而可能成为极端主义和混乱的温床。Palantir的项目则旨在提供一个基于真正“精英主义”的替代路径。

“If you are the kind of person that would’ve gone to Yale, classically high IQ, and you have generalized knowledge but it’s not specific, you’re effed,” Karp recently said in an interview with Axios. “There’s some schools you maybe should go to, otherwise, go to the cheapest school and come to Palantir—or just come here.”

The CEO conceded he picked on Yale because he has family members there—and actually it’s one of the few colleges he says students should attend, aside from Stanford University. But his general sentiment is simply attending an elite U.S. college isn’t a one-way ticket to success. It echoes his many assertions higher education is no longer a reliable training ground for the next cohort of movers and shakers; earlier this year, Palantir even launched its Meritocracy Fellowship to sway high school students away from attending college and work at the $439 billion defense tech company instead. 

In this shaky labor market, Karp says he believes Ivy League degree-holders won’t always be the ones achieving greatness. Instead, it’ll be those who have specific domain knowledge—those who ask questions like, “How do I impute the problem in this complicated device that’s going wrong, that otherwise would be fixed by a Japanese engineer, while being a high school grad?”

“Those people are going to make a lot more money, specifically because you can turn it any way you want,” Karp explained. “Within a relatively rapid amount of time, you will get paid downstream of the value you create.”

The Meritocracy Fellowship and Karp’s disdain for elite colleges

The leader of Palantir—a tech company that’s faced controversy over providing software for ICE and running data analytics for the U.S. Army—has long slammed higher education for not preparing students for the real world. 

“Everything you learned at your school and college about how the world works is intellectually incorrect,” Karp told CNBC in an interview earlier this year.

Even when assessing what talent to hire for his own company, he doesn’t care if applicants attended a prestigious university. He says he believes working at Palantir is the top-notch qualification to put on resumes in the tech world, and is even recruiting teenagers to join his operation. 

“If you did not go to school, or you went to a school that’s not that great, or you went to Harvard or Princeton or Yale, once you come to Palantir, you’re a Palantirian—no one cares about the other stuff,” Karp said during the business’ Q2 2025 earnings call. “This is by far the best credential in tech. If you come to Palantir, your career is set.”

In expressing his devotion to sway budding talent away from “indoctrinating” colleges, Palantir commenced its Meritocracy Fellowship this April. The four-month, paid internship is aimed at recent high school graduates who are not already enrolled in college. The program required Ivy League-level test scores to qualify, and attracted more than 500 applicants, with only 22 Gen Zers making the cut.

“Opaque admissions standards at many American universities have displaced meritocracy and excellence,” the fellowship posting said. “As a result, qualified students are being denied an education based on subjective and shallow criteria. Absent meritocracy, campuses have become breeding grounds for extremism and chaos.”

During their stint, the pupils learned about U.S. history and foundations of the West, working alongside Palantir’s full-time employees in solving technical problems and improving products. The fellows will wrap the program this month after choosing to forgo their undergraduate degrees—and those who “excelled” will be given the chance to interview for a full-time job at the business.

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Palantir Alex Karp 精英教育 职业发展 技能 大学教育 Meritocracy Fellowship Elite Education Career Development Skills Higher Education
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