KC joins national STEM Ecosystem program
September 11, 2015 | Ashley Jost
Kansas City was named one of 27 communities to pilot a national program aimed to boost the area science, technology, engineering and math, or STEM, ecosystem.
There are still many unknowns following the announcement as community leaders involved wait for further direction from the STEM Ecosystem Initiative, but Science Pioneers executive director LeAnn Smith said she does know Kansas City is receiving a technical assistance team. Science Pioneers, which will serve as one of the organizers of the local “ecosySTEMKC” group, provides education activities encourage science education for youth in Kansas City.
Each city is guaranteed a team of trained professionals who can provide the “20,000-foot view,” as Smith called it, of the STEM environment in order to help provide a roadmap of how to improve.
STEM Ecosystems has been around for more than a decade, and focus on building collaborations that yield education opportunities for young people in the STEM areas.
For Kansas City, Smith said the collaboration across all sectors is imperative. She said that between companies, nonprofits and educators, the STEM environment is “rich,” but “very siloed.”
“These experts can help us identify the gaps, and help us weave this tapestry together,” she said.
The Kansas City effort has been dubbed ‘ecosySTEMKC,’ and organizers include Science Pioneers, Kansas City STEM Alliance, Kansas Enrichment Network and Mid-America Regional Council.
Though some cities, like Kansas City, are newly-named ‘Communities of Practice,’ others have already been working with STEM Ecosystems’ teams and have learned practices to share.
“The approach the (STEM) Funders Network is taking is phenomenal,” Smith said. “There are already so many best practices and high-performing programs they’re going to leverage.”
Next week, 10 of the 27 cities will be awarded a $10,000 grant. And in November, a group of leaders from organizations involved in the ecosySTEMKC effort are traveling to Washington D.C. for a kick-off meeting to learn what’s next in the process.
Featured Business

2015 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Tech workforce program championed by former Chiefs star graduates its first KC class
An education initiative recently launched in Kansas City not only focuses on lifting up young people from low-income backgrounds and helping them succeed in the high-tech sector, said pro football hall of famer Will Shields: it upends a cycle of decline and replaces it with building blocks. i.c.stars, headquartered in Chicago, launched in Kansas City…
Build-A-Bear founder joins VFA’s board, lauding group as an ‘onramp’ to entrepreneurship for overlooked young professionals
ST. LOUIS — A hometown founder and entrepreneurial icon is joining the board of one of the region’s premiere work placement opportunities for early-career professionals. Maxine Clark, founder of Build-A-Bear Workshop — the teddy-bear-themed retailer she launched in 1997 in St. Lous — is the latest appointment to the national board of directors for Venture…
Leveraging KC’s resources: How the right people at the right time can unlock a startup’s potential
The level of collaboration seen in Kansas City’s entrepreneurial ecosystem is unmatched by peer communities, said Jill Meyer, noting it’s not a phenomenon that developed by accident. And it takes transparency and trust, she added. “There is a lot of work that resource partners do to make sure that our companies and our founders have…
Looking for investors? A startup’s first ask shouldn’t be for money, leading VCs say
Most startup founders think of funding as transactional, Darcy Howe shared, but it’s actually relational. “You’ve got to have relationships with people long before they’ll fund and that includes angels and all the others,” the KCRise Fund founding managing director told a crowd gathered at UMKC’s Bloch Executive Hall for Startland News’ Kansas City Startups…
