Kansas City scores $50K to inject innovation into education
March 17, 2016 | Kat Hungerford
Kansas City recently snagged a $50,000 grant that aims to fuel the development of a passionate, 21st-century workforce.
The City of Fountains was named one of eight winners of the national LRNG City Challenge. As a result, the KC Social Innovation Center will use the grant to implement new programming this summer.

Keefe
The LRNG platform connects and organizes local learning experiences to give students access to opportunities both in and out of school. The platform will help develop a workforce better prepared to meet future needs, said Kari Keefe, executive director of the innovation center and the Think Big Foundation.
“The LRNG platform is a strategic vision for creating a 21st-century workforce in the connected age,” Keefe said. “It will help catalyze Kansas City’s vision for education as a net-centric, digital city.”
Keefe said KC Social Innovation Center plans to use the grant to hire staff to manage the program, support partner organizations and youth outreach efforts. Key partners are Kansas City Mayor Sly James, the KC STEM Alliance and Kansas City Public Library.
Through LRNG, students can immerse themselves in their interests through a platform that connects existing civic organizations, public institutions and businesses with online programming. By completing “playlists,” or pre-planned combinations of real-world experiences and online learning, students earn digital badges to beef up resumes and land internships or other opportunities.
Programs like LRNG are the future of learning and turn learning into a lifestyle, Keefe said.
“We believe the evolution of learning in Kansas City starts here,” Keefe said. “Not only does it bring opportunities for inclusion and access to rich learning experiences that will directly impact youth, but it has the potential to reshape and influence the organizations that serve youth in tremendous ways — with efficiency, shared resources, network collaborations, outreach and data.”
Plans will begin immediately on an integrated pilot with a job fair on April 16th at the Kauffman Foundation. Youth in the program will go through a series of learning experiences, and they’ll be able to earn badges that will unlock access to specific jobs and opportunities over the summer.
Kansas City joins a national movement that includes Chicago, Dallas, Pittsburgh and Washington, D.C., which have already worked as established LRNG Cities. Other LRNG City Challenge winners are: San Diego, San Jose, and West Sacramento, Calif; Columbus and Springfield, Ohio; Rochester, New York; and Philadelphia, PA.
For more information on LRNG, check out the video below.
Featured Business

2016 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Digital Sandbox KC funding three UMKC student-led startups
Kansas City business incubator Digital Sandbox KC selected three student-led companies for proof-of-concept funding support Tuesday. The enterprises were selected from the University of Missouri-Kansas City’s E-Scholar program and will join three other E-Scholar companies selected in June as part of Digital Sandbox’s partnership with UMKC. Each student startup will receive $10,000 in project development…
Document: FarmLink raises additional $24.6M for ag tech
Ag tech startups in Kansas City are plowing a promising 2016. Kansas City-based FarmLink recently secured nearly $24.6 million in investment capital for its farming technology, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing. The company offers a suite of tech services for farmers, including analytics platform TrueHarvest and machinery sharing platform MachineryLink Sharing. TrueHarvest…
‘PayIt’ up: Kansas City gov tech startup registers $4.5M investment
Like the dozens of people around him, John Thomson’s 2013 wait at the Missouri Department of Motor Vehicles had him aggravated. It was such a pain — watching the queue slowly subside while working on his phone — that the entrepreneur did what innovators do: he built a company to alleviate the chore. Fast forward…
Sporting Innovations reveals name change
Sports tech company Sporting Innovations is kicking off 2016 new branding. The company announced Monday that it’s changed its name to “FanThreeSixty” to better reflect an “ongoing transformation” and to better connect to its software platform of the same name, FanThreeSixty CEO Robb Heineman said. “We feel the timing is ideal for evolving our brand…
