

But he got over his skepticism in 2006 and began recording the first of the more than 3,000 tutorials he has posted to date.

At the time, he recalls, YouTube was known mostly as a home for videos of cats playing piano, not math lessons. By then, he had moved to Silicon Valley with his firm and met a friend who suggested using YouTube to post his lessons. Khan faced a problem: he needed to scale. Soon after, word got around the family that the MIT graduate with degrees in electrical engineering, computer science and mathematics was available for free tutoring. So he tutored her online with Yahoo Doodle, an instant messaging service that supports live illustration. She was in New Orleans he was in Boston working full-time as a hedge-fund analyst.

In 2004, he saw his cousin Nadia, then a seventh grader, struggling with conversions and offered to help. His online education nonprofit, Khan Academy, sees more than 6 million monthly visitors who click on lessons and videos and practice problems on everything from basic math to organic chemistry. When Sal Khan teaches, the world listens.
