Sam Altman's high school English teacher hoped he wouldn't go into technology
- Sam Altman's high school teacher described him as a renaissance teen, a Bloomberg report said.
- But the teacher, Andy Abbott, hoped Altman would avoid a tech career.
- He said Altman was creative and he hoped he would be something like an author.
Sam Altman is now one of the most recognizable names in tech. But despite the OpenAI CEO's success, one of his former teachers said they'd actually hoped he wouldn't work in that field.
Altman was "so creative," his high school English teacher, Andy Abbott, told Bloomberg in a piece published Thursday. Describing him as "truly exceptional," Abbot said he'd hoped Altman would end up as an author or "something like that."
"I remember thinking — and this is an embarrassing confession — I hope he doesn't go into technology," Abbott told Bloomberg. Altman attended John Burroughs School, a private school in St. Louis that the CEO has since become a donor at, the report said. Abbott has since become head of the school.
To some, Altman's career path is creative. The CEO has been at the forefront of AI innovation and the emergence of AI chatbots, reshaping everyday life. OpenAI most recently introduced its latest version of ChatGPT powered by GPT-4o, which can have human-like conversations and reason across audio, vision, and text.
The teacher described Altman to Bloomberg as a Renaissance teen who edited the yearbook, played water polo, built the school's website, and competed in Model United Nations.
"Everyone knew that this guy's better at most things than most of us are," Abbott said.
The report also said that Altman displayed high confidence from a young age. In one instance, students wanted to boycott a school assembly about homosexuality, and Altman stood up in front of the entire student body and announced he was gay, the report said.
Another of Altman's attributes is listening and diagnosing problems, startup founder John Coogan, who crossed paths with Altman while the latter was running Y Combinator, told Bloomberg. An unidentified acquaintance of Altman's also said in the report that he excels at dazzling people who can help him.
Altman's high level of confidence and self-assurance is still evident — the CEO has previously said he nonchalantly texted world leaders during his brief ousting from OpenAI, and he has built his career on convincing people to take a chance on what he believes in.
Still, a series of recent dramas — including that ousting as CEO last November, an embarrassing spat with movie star Scarlett Johansson, and reports about OpenAI stifling criticism with its restrictive and unusual NDAs — may show Altman's charisma can only go so far.