Bitcoin-Funded ‘Satoshi Scholarship’ Opens Le Monde School’s Doors to Global Students


Lomond School in Helensburgh, Scotland has launched a fully-funded ‘Satoshi Scholarship’, expanding its experience with Bitcoin from the payments office into the heart of school life.

The award will cover two years of tuition fees and accommodation at Burnbrae, the school’s boarding house, for one student who would have difficulty accessing this type of education without support.

Applications are open worldwide, and the deadline is May 24.

The grant comes after a year of rapid change at Le Monde, which became the first school in the world to accept Bitcoin for education from the fall of 2025. Some parents Already paid the fees in Bitcoin, and the school began building a BTC treasury funded by donations from supporters in the broader Bitcoin community.

School leaders describe this as the early stage of a savings strategy shaped by ideas of sound money and long-term financial flexibility that run through Bitcoin culture.

BTC now works across campus in more literal ways, too. Lomond runs its own node and several mining units, which support the Bitcoin network and provide heat for the classrooms.

The live memory view in the study and library gives students and staff a window into transactional activity on the network, turning an abstract protocol into something they see during the school day.