On 9 March 2026, for International Women's Day, LSE Generate named Maths Angel co-founder Lexie Li among the female founders in its fellowship programme.

The feature
LSE Generate is the London School of Economics' startup incubator, and its fellowship runs founders through an Ideation stage and an Acceleration stage. The founders in the spotlight earned their place through LSE Generate's Startup Competition, which is the route into that flagship fellowship.
In its post, LSE Generate introduced Lexie as the founder of Maths Angel, “personalised maths support accessible to every student”. Recognition from a programme of that standing is a trust signal we do not take lightly for a young education brand.
What LSE Generate said
LSE Generate framed the selection plainly. The founders in the spotlight, it said, “have been selected through our Startup Competition to join our flagship fellowship programme, where they continue to innovate, grow, and inspire our entire community.”
Personalised maths support accessible to every student.
Why this recognition matters
Recognition from a programme like LSE Generate is more than a nice headline. For a fast-growing education brand founded by LSE alumni, being chosen by one of the world's leading universities is independent proof that our work stands up to scrutiny, and it gives parents, teachers, and schools a credible reason to take a closer look at what we are building.
Read more about the team behind Maths Angel.