
Salman Amin Khan
Educator, founder and CEO of Khan Academy; founder of Schoolhouse.world; vision steward and board member at TED
of 100 · improving trend · Strong moral/spiritual alignment
Standing
78/100
Raw Score
66/85
Confidence
60%
Evidence
Medium
About
Sal Khan's public record is anchored in building and scaling free educational tools that have reached tens of millions of learners, plus follow-on projects aimed at peer tutoring and more human support. The main cautions are that the public record says much more about educational access than about private worship or household obligations, and some critics argue that parts of his school and AI agenda have been overclaimed or sit uneasily beside the egalitarian mission.
The strongest observable pattern is repeated, institution-building service: Khan left a lucrative finance path, turned family tutoring into a nonprofit, helped make SAT prep free, and later launched Schoolhouse.world during the pandemic. He also shows some integrity-positive behavior by publicly acknowledging limits in AI tutoring rather than pretending early claims were fully vindicated. Scores stay below exemplary because several belief-and-worship items remain lightly documented in public, and some criticism around elite lab-school tuition and AI optimism complicates the record.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Khan scores strongest on social care because the central public pattern is building free educational access for people who otherwise face cost, geography, or support barriers. He also scores positively on integrity and resilience because he took personal career risk, kept the nonprofit mission central, and later acknowledged limits in a high-profile AI claim. The score remains below exemplary because some parts of the record are contested, and the public evidence is much thinner on private worship discipline, family care, and directly documented personal redistribution than on educational institution-building.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Contribution to Others
Personal Discipline
Reliability
Stability Under Pressure
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Began remotely tutoring his cousin and built the seed of Khan Academy
Khan started helping his cousin Nadia with math from Boston while working in finance, then widened that support to other relatives as demand spread.
→ A private act of help became the starting point for a much larger public-service education project.
mediumIncorporated Khan Academy as a nonprofit
The project was formally structured as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit rather than a paywalled tutoring business.
→ The nonprofit form locked the core mission around free access and made later philanthropic scaling possible.
highLeft hedge-fund work to pursue free education full-time
Khan left his finance career, lived on savings, and focused his time on growing Khan Academy full-time before major grants arrived.
→ This raised the personal cost of the mission and showed willingness to absorb financial risk for a public-facing educational project.
highLaunched free official SAT practice with College Board
Khan Academy and College Board made personalized official SAT practice available for free, directly targeting a service that had long favored families who could pay for prep.
→ The program widened access to college-prep support at national scale and later reached millions of users.
highFaced criticism over whether Khan Lab School fit the access mission
NPR highlighted tension between Khan Academy's free-for-all mission and the Khan Lab School's expensive Silicon Valley tuition model, while Khan also acknowledged that lecture videos are only one part of education and not a full substitute for human teaching.
→ The episode did not erase the broader access mission, but it introduced a credible fairness critique and showed that some parts of the project were more elite than the main nonprofit brand suggested.
mediumFounded Schoolhouse.world during the pandemic era
Khan launched Schoolhouse.world as a free peer-to-peer tutoring nonprofit aimed at giving students more live human support and connection.
→ The initiative extended his record from one-to-many educational content into live, volunteer-powered tutoring at global scale.
highReported large-scale reach across districts, international learners, and AI tools
Khan Academy's SY24-25 annual report said the district program reached nearly 1.5 million licensed learners across 795 U.S. districts, Khanmigo reached 2.0 million users, and the platform reached 62.4 million international learners, educators, and parents.
→ The report strengthens the case that Khan's institution-building kept delivering broad public benefit rather than stopping at early viral success.
highPublicly acknowledged that AI tutoring had not transformed learning for most students
In a Chalkbeat interview, Khan said Khanmigo had been a 'non-event' for many students because most did not use it much, a notable pullback from earlier revolutionary framing.
→ The admission complicates the record because earlier claims were ambitious, but it also counts in his favor that he publicly conceded real limits instead of denying them.
mediumPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Leaving finance for a nonprofit mission
2009Khan stepped away from a lucrative hedge-fund path and lived on savings while trying to make Khan Academy viable full-time.
Response: He accepted personal financial uncertainty instead of immediately defaulting back to a safer, higher-paid track.
mixed_positivePandemic-era learning disruption
2020COVID-era school disruption intensified the need for live help, not just self-paced videos.
Response: He helped launch Schoolhouse.world to add free peer tutoring and more direct human connection.
positiveAI hype meets weak student uptake
2026Early rhetoric around AI tutoring was stronger than the first wave of actual student usage and transformation.
Response: Khan publicly conceded the limits and shifted emphasis toward motivation, context, and the human side of learning.
mixed_positiveProgression
crisis years
As the model widened, it also attracted fairness and pedagogy criticism, especially where elite or overclaimed experiments seemed at odds with the access mission.
mixedcurrent stage
The current record shows continued large-scale delivery plus a somewhat more grounded public posture about AI, with educational service still much more visible than private spiritual life.
improvingearly years
Family tutoring and explanatory teaching emerged first as a concrete act of service rather than as a startup thesis.
upgrowth years
The project moved from individual tutoring to mission-driven institution building through nonprofit incorporation, philanthropy, and free college-prep expansion.
upBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Turns tutoring and explanation into free public goods rather than keeping them scarce or premium.
- • Repeatedly tries to widen access for learners who are blocked by cost, geography, or weak local support.
- • Publicly frames technology as a tool that should still preserve human connection and teaching relationships.
Concerns
- • The record is less persuasive on private devotional discipline than on public educational service.
- • Some institutional experiments, especially a high-tuition lab school and bold AI rhetoric, sit awkwardly beside the equity mission.
- • A large share of positive evidence comes from organizations he leads, so independent corroboration matters.
Evidence Quality
8
Strong
3
Medium
1
Weak
Overall: medium
This profile evaluates observable public behavior and evidence, not the state of a person's soul.