Talpiot program

Talpiot program is an elite Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) training program for recruits who have demonstrated outstanding academic ability in the sciences and leadership potential. Graduates pursue double higher education while they serve in the army, and they use their expertise to further IDF research and development in technological leadership positions.[1] The program was inaugurated in 1979.

History

The initiators of the program were Professor Felix Dothan and Professor Shaul Yatziv of the Hebrew University, who submitted the idea to the Israeli chief of staff Rafael Eitan. The idea was to harness human creativity, which peaks early, to develop new technologies for the army. The program is sponsored by the Israeli Air Force and IDF Administration for the Development of Weapons and the Technological Industry, and run under the auspices of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

Program

During their initiation period, the cadets study for their B.Sc. in physics and mathematics (some of them in computer science – according to their choice) at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem in Air Force uniform, while also undergoing different periods of field training designed to familiarize them with all branches of the IDF (infantry level 04 basic training, combat engineering course, armored corps course, artillery corps course, instruction in military tactics etc.). At the end of the course, which lasts 40 months, the cadets receive the rank of first lieutenant (segen) and a B.Sc. and become integrated in R&D in the IDF and Israel Military Industries, or alternatively, in various combat positions, if they so choose.

In addition to the three years obligated by the Israeli law, the service includes six years of standing army service in a wide variety of positions. The total program, including military service, is nine years.

The first class had 25 cadets. Later, the class was increased to 50–60. The applicant pool consists of nearly ten-thousand top scorers in a test taken by all graduating high school seniors. 150–200 potential applicants are then subjected to a two-day series of tests. These include further IQ exams, as well as group-tasks designed to test one's social dynamics, all conducted under the supervision of trained psychologists and military personnel. For example, teams of applicants are given a specific task then the instructions are changed while the test is in progress, such as shortening the allotted time or changing the assigned tasks. Final acceptance into the program entails a high security clearance rating, given by the Air Force.

In February 2016 a book called "Israel's Edge: The Story of IDF's Most Elite Unit - Talpiot" was released and written by CNBC executive producer Jason Gewirtz and published by Gefen in Jerusalem about the unit and the history of how it came into existence.

Notable Talpiot Alumni (Talpionim)

  • Uri Alon, professor of systems biology at the Weizmann Institute
  • Arik Czerniak, one of the founders of Metacafe, a Palo Alto company that has user posted videos.
  • Shlomo Dubnov, professor of computer music at the University of California, San Diego
  • Yoav Freund, professor at the University of California, San Diego, and Gödel Prize winner
  • Uri Rokni, neuroscientist and algorithm team leader at Mobileye
  • Elon Lindenstrauss, professor of mathematics at the Hebrew University and winner of the 2010 Fields Medal
  • Avi Loeb, American/Israeli theoretical physicist at Harvard University
  • Marius Nacht, one of the co-founders of Check Point Software Technologies
  • Eli Mintz, Simchon Faigler and Amir Natan, founders of Compugen Ltd.
  • Gad Getz, professor at Harvard Medical School and director of the Cancer Genome Computational Analysis group at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, winner of the 2017 Paul Marks Prize for Cancer Research.
  • Roy Kishony, professor of biology and computer science at the Technion. Winner of the 2013 Sanofi-Pasteur award.
  • Daniel Ramot, Oren Shoval, founders of Via
  • Assaf Rappaport, CEO of Microsoft Israel's R&D center and founder of Adallom
  • Meir Shaashua, co-founder of Waves Audio
  • Elad Walach, co-founder and CEO of Aidoc, a Tel Aviv-based radiology AI company

See also

References

Secret Weapon: How an Elite Military School Feeds Israel's Tech Industry, Wall Street Journal, Vol. CCL, No. 4, July 6, 2007.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.