The education system is broken — these Kansas Citians want to fix it
March 8, 2017 | Meghan LeVota
As you may remember or have experienced with your own child, there seems to come a point in one’s educational journey where kids ask themselves — what’s the point?
The answer has always been, so that you can get good grades, to get into a good college to then get a good job. The problem with that, however, it that the public secondary education model hasn’t changed much since it was designed in 1893 to serve an industrial economy.
As you know, technology has changed things. A lot.
That challenge was the subject of a recent documentary screening and panel discussion on Most Likely To Succeed, hosted by the Center of Entrepreneurial Ecosystem Development (CEED,) Gould Evans and STEAM Studio at Plexpod Lenexa. The panel featured a variety of experts, including recruiting managers, educators and entrepreneurs.
CEED co-founder Adam Arredondo said that the failure of the education system is directly connected to the skills gap that many industries face today.
“Education has to change in order to meet the needs of the current workforce,” Arredondo said. “These screenings bring the community together to begin to have a conversation where we can come to the same understandings together.”
The 2015 film Most Likely to Succeed showcases the struggles that educators and industry leaders face in transforming education to meet the demands of a changing economy. Following students from the San Diego-based project-based-learning school High Tech High, it also exhibits possible solutions for the U.S. system.
Kelly Services recruiting manager Katy Fuller said the education system’s focus on hard skills and retention is no longer working as the information age calls for soft skills and creativity.
“When people first come out of school and they’re looking to enter the workforce, they are trained test takers,” Fuller said. “They are pushed very quickly to think outside the box if they want to move forward. It’s not a comfortable thing, especially when we have to do it for the first time. They are so damn afraid to step up and do anything, so they don’t, and then they feel like they’re failures.”
Kerri Thurston, CFO at C2FO, echoed the sentiment when she shared the specific soft skills that her team looks for when hiring.
“We’re looking for people who will take risks, innovate and collaborate across the organization,” Thurston said. “We want curiosity and the desire to be a lifelong learner. We’re looking for people who will be willing and able to give and receive feedback.”
Educators on the panel emphasized the necessity for teachers to begin thinking of themselves as “facilitators” rather than teachers. DreamsKC founder Catina Taylor said that schools must incorporate more project-based learning and problem solving in the classroom.
“When I think about education I think about liberation, we are cultivating and guiding human needs that are very complex,” Taylor said. “I think we make a lot of assumptions about what children can and cannot do and we need to take a step back and allow them to operate within their own power, and guide them to finding solutions that will impact us all.”
Making her own mark toward change, Taylor is in the process of building the charter school Dreams KC — an innovative, project-based educational experience. Also on the panel was Ryan Stanley, who will serve as principal of Park Hill School District’s new LEAD Innovation Studio in 2017.
In addition to hosting documentary screenings and discussions, CEED launched a new approach to education via MECA Challenge. MECA — which stands for most entrepreneurial community in America — is a problem-solving contest for high school and college students aiming to transform education and produce innovative thinkers. Since its launch in 2014, MECA Challenge has transformed into a scalable event that challenged hundreds of students last year.
“(The documentary) illustrates the impact of technology on the workforce, which is really important to show as tech advances the basic skills you come out of school with, computers and robots can do and are doing more and more every day,” Arredondo said. “If we don’t adapt and education doesn’t change we will literally be creating an army of unemployable people.”
The next documentary screening will be held April 4 at Rockhurst University.
Featured Business

2017 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
HomeRoom closes $1M pre-seed, joining Y Combinator’s latest batch of funded startups
A Kansas City proptech startup that matches roommates with affordable coliving opportunities is reporting record growth, along with a newly announced million-dollar pre-seed funding round led by a leading early stage investor. The investment from Y Combinator, The Uplift Syndicate and The HO0 Fund is expected to help HomeRoom — a residential real estate marketplace that…
Winning alumni revive Columbia Startup Weekend to unlock Midwest talent, find the next billion-dollar startup
Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. This series is possible thanks to the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, which leads a collaborative, nationwide effort to identify and remove large and small barriers to new business creation. Techstars…
‘People eat with their eyes first’: Why pop-ups were just a sample of this new bakery’s appeal
Brown Suga Bakes began modestly — selling cookies out of lunch bags mid-pandemic, said Ebony Paul-Harris, detailing a strategy of starting small to achieve big results. In her case: opening the oven to a brick-and-mortar bakery and storefront in Olathe. “In the beginning, we used to make really small cookies. We also had a sample…
Bluetooth your burnt ends: BBQ tech startup fires up new way to keep tabs on those slabs
FireBoard is smoking toward its seventh office in seven years as hiring and product development heat up for the ever-expanding Kansas City-based maker of cloud-connected digital thermometers — a staple tool of many BBQ enthusiasts and restauranteurs. It’s latest addition: the FireBoard Spark, an entry-level meat thermometer with a lower price point than previous models,…
