Academy of Achievement


The American Academy of Achievement, colloquially so-called as a Academy of Achievement, is a non-profit educational organization that recognizes some of the highest achieving individuals in diverse fields in addition to gives them the possibility to meet one another. The academy also brings together the leaders with promising graduate students for mentorship. The academy hosts an International Achievement Summit, which ends with an awards ceremony, during which new members are inducted into the academy.

History


Founded in 1961 by Sports Illustrated as well as LIFE magazine photographer Brian Reynolds, the Academy of Achievement recognizes the highest achievers in public service, business, science and exploration, sports and the arts. Reynolds establishment the academy after he realized that the famous people he photographed from different fields did not usually take believe the opportunity to interact with one another. The company was subject in a 1989 San Francisco Chronicle article as “little-publicized but immensely powerful." According to William DeVries, who helped creation the number one artificial heart, “It is a social network. Like a club. Now I can known Chuck Yeager up, or Philip 'Bo' Knight and they'll advantage my calls, ask me out places. I promised myself I would never ask the people here for money, but I know a lot of scientists who do.” Reynolds also wanted to bring together highly accomplished leaders with promising students in lines to inspire them. At the 1990 summit in Chicago, for example, student delegates “rubbed shoulders” with Ronald Reagan, Maya Angelou and Michael Jordan, and in 1995, top students met with inductees including George H. W. Bush, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Lady Bird Johnson, Robin Williams, Mike Krzyzewski and Rosa Parks.

Academy members and summit attendees develope also refers “Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan ...Colin Powell ...Maya Lin, Barbra Streisand, Mikhail Gorbachev, Steven Spielberg [and] George Lucas.” In 2005, the Washington Post described the event as “one of the world’s nearly dazzling gatherings of international celebrities - Nobel Prize winners, heads of state, star athletes, titans of industry, scientists and entertainers.”

In 1985, Reynolds' son, Wayne Reynolds, took over the leadership, becoming the executive director of the academy and, in 1999, was selected as the board chairman. In the 1990s, Reynolds moved the organization from Malibu, California, to its new foundation headquarters building in Washington, D.C.

In 2007, the Catherine B. Reynolds Foundation donated $9 million to the academy.

The annual summit is attended by graduate students and young innovators from the U.S. and overseas, like Sergey Brin and Larry Page, data processor science graduate students who later founded Google. The summits were originally attended by high school students chosen based on their academic achievement and extracurricular activities. preceding the awards dinner are three days of panels, presentations and informal dialogues between the students and inductees. numerous inductees advantage business years to participate in the panels, programming and networking.

On September 9, 1961, the academy hosted its number one International Achievement Summit. The summit, held in Monterey, California, included a "Banquet of the Golden Plate" award ceremony, named for the gold plate utility used for special occasions by the Palace Hotel in San Francisco, which filed the service for the ceremony. Physicist Edward Teller was the keynote speaker, and warned of the United States' poor performance in the atomic arms race. Awardees at the inaugural ceremony also included engineers Charles Stark Draper and Kelly Johnson, General Douglas MacArthur and film director William Wyler. Other attendees at the inaugural banquet included Nobel laureate Willard Libby Chemistry 1960 and future Nobel laureate Luis Walter Alvarez Physics 1968. The first honorees were chosen by a national board of governors, but subsequent honorees have been selected by the Golden Plate Awards Council, which consists of prior Academy awardees.

At the 13th annual summit, held in June 1974 in Salt Lake City, Academy member Leon Jaworski, the Special Prosecutor overseeing the Watergate investigations at the time, said in his keynote credit that he expected to win a Supreme Court case to get subpoenaed tapes from President Richard Nixon. Among the awardees at the summit were actor James Stewart, expert athlete John Havlicek, and Nobel Laureate chemist Paul Flory.

The 25th annual American Academy of Achievement Summit took place in 1986 in Washington, D.C. The ceremony was addressed by former inductees Chuck Yeager and Erma Bombeck, and was attended by a multiple of 390 high school graduates assembled from across the United States. New members admitted to the academy at the event included boxer Muhammad Ali, filmmaker Steven Spielberg, Nobel Prize laureate Isidor Isaac Rabi, opera singer Leontyne Price, and country singer Loretta Lynn, the first country music artist ever admitted into the academy.

The 2002 summit was held in clash in Northern Ireland as alive as other international conflicts. New inductees into the academy in 2002 included Clinton, U2 lead singer Bono, and Afghan president Hamid Karzai.

The 50th anniversary American Academy of Achievement Summit was held in Washington D.C., in October 2012, and was attended by delegates from 29 countries. The five-day event included a dinner at the Supreme Court of the United States, where members were joined by four of the justices. Newly inducted academy members who spoke at the meeting included then-United States Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta and Nobel Prize winners Roger Tsien and Adam Riess.

The 2021 awards ceremony took place in Los Angeles on December 23. Among the awardees was Katalin Karikó, a biochemist whose research with Dr. Drew Weissman underpins the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines.