KC entrepreneurial educator: ‘Zip code shouldn’t determine success’

October 17, 2017  |  Meghan LeVota

Rachel Foster

Entrepreneurship education should begin as early as kindergarten, said Rachel Foster.

“The younger my students are, the more creative they are, and the less the world has had time to tell them that it’s ‘not possible’ or ‘you can’t do that,’” said Foster, entrepreneurship teacher at Lee A. Tolbert Community Academy. “If we are able to capture the creativity, brilliance and creative thoughts of a 5-year-old, they will hold onto it when they grow up.”

In her third year with the Teach for America program, Foster has developed entrepreneurship curriculum and activities for students K–8, touching the hearts of as many as 500 children per year. She teaches students financial literacy, critical thinking, collaboration and how to solve 21st-century problems, she said.

Equal access to innovative thinking is one of the best ways to disrupt systems of inequality, Foster said. With faith in the power of entrepreneurship and her students, Foster wants to make Lee A. Tolbert the most “innovative elementary and middle school in Kansas City,” she said.

Foster won a $6,000 grant to build a makerspace for her students Monday at Teach for America Kansas City’s Shark Tank: Teacher Edition pitch event at the Gem Theater. The competition featured such “sharks” as Charlie Hustle CEO Chase McAnulty, award-winning author Angela Cervantes, Hot 103 Jamz radio host Julee Jonez and executive vice chancellor at the University of Kansas Neeli Bendapudi. Five other Teach for America teachers also walked away with funding.

“I am honored and still in shock,” Foster said Tuesday. “I feel as if last night was the show and now I am just invigorated and ready to put in the work and make it happen.”

During her pitch, Foster noted the rise in entrepreneurial educational models being implemented at the schools in Kansas City’s suburbs, including the Blue Valley CAPS program and Park Hill’s LEAD Innovation Studio.  These opportunities aren’t available to all students in the metro, she said.

“Darius is an eighth-grader of mine,” she said at the Gem Theater stage Monday. “He is brilliant innovative creative and quite frankly going to be a successful entrepreneur. However, Darius isn’t promised an innovation high school to attend due to his zip code. This has got to change and the change starts here.”

Lee A. Tolbert Community Academy is a majority-minority school with 100 percent of its students qualifying for free or reduced lunch, she said. Her students deserve the same opportunity as the students at Blue Valley School District. Her school’s new makerspace will help even the playing field, Foster said.

“It’s important for all of our children to have access to these things that disrupt poverty and the institutionalized inequities happening in Kansas City,” she said. “They need access to entrepreneurship to break the mold and to break the systematic issues that students of color are living in.”

The $6,000 grant will go toward tools and supplies for the makerspace, as well as new furniture to inspire creativity and flexibility in students of all ages, she said.

“We can’t continue teaching in silos,” Foster said. “We have to combine content and make it real. The skills that don’t always come in a textbook are often the deciding factor for our students’ success.”

Foster has partnered with the Kansas City Startup Foundation in building her curriculum. She continues to lean on Kansas City’s startup community for support as she moves forward with the project.

The Kansas City startup community has impacted my work more than any other community,” Foster said. “Now, I’m just excited to give my students access to a space that feels like an office that they could be working someday.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2017 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Sickweather

        Flu season, ‘Good Morning America’ give Sickweather a booster shot

        By Tommy Felts | December 19, 2017

        It’s not every day a Hall of Fame football player pitches your product. And while it wasn’t a flawless performance, Sickweather isn’t complaining about “Good Morning America” host Michael Strahan’s effort to highlight the Kansas City-based company’s illness forecasting tech during a flu season segment, CEO Graham Dodge said. “We had no control over how…

        net neutrality

        Moran wants Congress to settle net neutrality in favor of ‘free and open’ internet

        By Tommy Felts | December 18, 2017

        Congress should have the final say on net neutrality — not federal regulators who change with each presidential administration, say a growing number of U.S. senators, including Kansas’ Jerry Moran. “Consumers want an internet that is free of content-based discrimination and supports the deployment of reliable, affordable broadband access throughout the country,” said Sen. Moran,…

        Ozzie Mendoza Diaz, Made in KC Cafe

        Made in KC Cafe opens downtown with experimental blend of coffee, retail (Photos)

        By Tommy Felts | December 15, 2017

        A hotly anticipated hybrid coffee shop — Made in KC Cafe — poured into downtown Kansas City Friday, marking the fourth store for a home-brewed retailer. “This will be a living, breathing experiment,” said Tyler Enders, Made in KC co-founder. “Made in KC Cafe is a nice way for us to dip our toe into…

        Brandon Love, Crumble Co

        Wonka of Wax: Dark times melt into quirky joy for Brandon Love’s Crumble Co

        By Tommy Felts | December 15, 2017

        With scents as varied as “Lavender Lemonade” and “Drunken Unicorn,” Brandon Love’s Crumble Co. burns in a unique — Love would say “joyful” — space within the candle market. A wide grin spreads across the 21-year-old founder’s face as he notes the name of the wax melt spreading aroma throughout his loft apartment at One…