94% of students
report increased CS and entrepreneurship capacity
91% of students
feel more confident about CS
97% student satisfaction
with instructors and facilitators
12th alum admitted to MIT
on full scholarship
3 alumni
serve on meet's
Board of Directors
71% of alumni
remain actively involved
alumni lead
our alumni program, the Jerusalem hub and the yearlong CS curriculum
65% of our educational team
are alumni
alumni featured
on Forbes, NYT, The Marker, TechCrunch and FemJLM
Our best evaluation that illustrates the meaning and impact of MEET is the impressive cohort of over 700 alumni, social entrepreneurs, researchers and activists, and their achievements.
So far, 30 MEET alumni have been accepted to the Technion, Israel Institute of Technology, 12 got accepted to MIT, another 2 to Harvard, and many more to several universities in Europe, including the TH Köln – University of Applied Sciences in Germany, and King’s College in the UK.
Moreover, two Alumnae were featured in 30 Under 30 by Forbes Israel – Helen Wexler (Israeli) in 2017, and Shayma Sharif (Palestinian) in 2020.
In case you missed it, please read our newsletters featuring: Shayma Sharif Shahd Nara Alicia Kamien Kazhdan

Class of 2021
Yossi joined MEET drawn by advanced computer science, and left with a deeper commitment to education and social impact. As a student, he co-founded a startup addressing social challenges and later returned as a Teaching Assistant and Instructor, mentoring younger participants. At MEET, he learned to collaborate across differences, and was empowered to use technology and education as tools for meaningful change.

Class of 2014
Hanna is a physician from Nazareth who brings together medicine, leadership, and social impact. After years in the healthcare system, he joined MEET’s Constellation program to develop a joint Israeli-Palestinian medical residency model that combines clinical training with shared responsibility and trust. He credits MEET with shaping his belief that real leadership grows from human connection, and that hospitals can serve as powerful spaces for cooperation across divides.