05/06/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 05/06/2026 11:40
May 6, 2026
CompanyToday, we're proud to introduce the inaugural ChatGPT Futures Class of 2026 (opens in a new window), recognizing 26 students and young builders using AI in thoughtful, ambitious, and deeply human ways.
The class of 2026 is the first generation to start and finish college with ChatGPT.
They arrived on campus in the fall of 2022 just as AI was beginning to reshape how people learn, create, and work. This generation was ChatGPT's earliest adopters, sharing the tool with their parents and siblings, friends and teachers. Now, they're graduating into a world where changes in technology are accelerating every day.
Over the past few years, I've spent time visiting campuses, speaking with students and educators, and watching how young people are actually using AI in their daily lives. What I've seen has challenged many of the assumptions people make about this generation.
Many students aren't using AI to avoid work. They're using it to attempt things they wouldn't have thought possible before.
I've met students who are building study tools for classmates. Translating mental health resources for underserved communities. Advancing scientific research. Designing accessibility tools for peers with disabilities. Turning side projects into real organizations with real impact.
Again and again, I've met students who discovered something surprisingly powerful: they don't have to wait. As Kyle Scenna, a 24 year-old ChatGPT Futures honoree and entrepreneur from the University of Waterloo told us: "I never thought the gap between noticing a problem and building something real could get this small." He's not alone in this feeling.
This generation doesn't have to wait to become experts before getting started.
They don't have to wait for funding before building.
They don't have to wait for permission before contributing.
That realization-that you can turn an idea into something tangible faster than ever before-is what inspired ChatGPT Futures.
These honorees represent over 20 universities and institutions from Vanderbilt and the University of Toronto to Oxford, Georgia Tech and many others.
Each member of the inaugural class will receive a $10,000 grant to continue advancing their work and will receive access to our frontier models.
What connects them is not a specific discipline or background. It's a mindset. They saw new tools emerge, got curious, and decided to build. That may become the defining and critical characteristic of this generation.
There are understandable questions about what AI might mean for learning, creativity, and jobs. I work on those questions every day with partners throughout the education ecosystem. But the students I've met have also given me a tangible view of what AI can unlock right now. It's agency.
AI doesn't replace ambition. It amplifies it.
For decades, the ability to build something-whether a product, a research project, a movement, or a company-often depended on access. Access to technical training, institutional support, networks, or funding. Those barriers haven't disappeared, but they are beginning to shift. Michelle Lawson, a 20-year-old student at Smith College and a ChatGPT Futures honoree shared with us, "I've always believed that you can achieve everything that you can imagine, as long as you're given the right support and resources. AI has made that happen not only for myself, but for hundreds of thousands of people."
Today, a student with curiosity and determination can prototype an idea faster, learn new skills independently, and contribute meaningfully in ways that once required far more resources.
That doesn't make human judgment, creativity, or hard work less important. If anything, it makes them more so.
Because the students who will thrive in this next chapter won't simply be the ones who know how AI works. They'll be the ones who know how to use it thoughtfully: to learn continuously, identify meaningful problems, collaborate effectively, and create things that matter to other people.
Education has a critical role to play in unlocking this sense of agency for all students. The goal is not simply to teach students how AI works or how to prompt effectively. Schools and universities must create space for students to build and create with AI, guided by teachers.
The goal should not just be AI literacy. We need to help students become adaptable thinkers and builders-people who can navigate ambiguity, pursue ideas with curiosity, and turn learning into action.
At OpenAI, we believe students should help shape the future of AI, not simply inherit it. To date, we've supported this transformation with tools and resources to support educators and students including ChatGPTEdu , 100 chats for Students (opens in a new window), Study Mode , and partnerships with organizations like the American Federation for Teachers . ChatGPT Futures is one more way we plan to celebrate the young people already doing exactly that.
But more than anything, we hope this program shines a light on a broader truth: The future of AI will not be defined only by the capabilities of the technology itself.
It will be defined by the people who choose to use it with curiosity, responsibility, creativity, and purpose. "The exciting thing is this is just the beginning," Nolan Windham, a 23-year-old Head of AI at a prominent hedge fund and ChatGPT Futures honoree told me. "Many young people will recognize their place as teachers for a society looking to learn to use the technology of the future."
Congratulations to the inaugural ChatGPT Futures Class of 2026. We can't wait to see the future you'll build.