VIDEO: Education startups earn $60K in LEANLAB grants at revamped Launch[ED] Day

November 12, 2018  |  Austin Barnes and Tommy Felts

Shanti Elangovan, InquirED

The work doesn’t end with LEANLAB Education’s Launch[ED] Day celebration, said Katie Boody. Four of the accelerator’s fellows will continue their startups’ research thanks to $60,000 in grant investments.

Katie Boody, LEANLAB Education, LEANLAB grants

Katie Boody, LEANLAB Education

The entrepreneur-led education ventures took the stage Thursday to pitch their companies to the Launch[ED] crowd at Plexpod Westport Commons, as well as to describe the research they conducted this fall at Kansas City school sites.

In a change from LEANLAB’s previous, annual fellowship-culminating events, Launch[ED] wasn’t a competition, but an opportunity to showcase the startups and their innovative ideas for reshaping K-12 education, said Boody, founder and CEO of LEANLAB.

Grant funding was awarded by a committee of representatives from local public schools, Lee A. Tolbert, Crossroads Preparatory Academy, and Pitcher Elementary. Awards included:

  • $22,000 to inquirED for a two-year study of the Davenport, Iowa, company’s impact on 150 elementary students.
  • $16,000 to Kansas City-based Base Academy of Music to give 32 students access to one-on-one music lessons through the 2018-2019 school year.
  • $12,000 to Doors to Explore for the continued product development of the Sandy Hook, Connecticut-based startup’s career exposure software in partnership with Crossroads Preparatory Academy.
  • $10,000 to Innovare for the Chicago company’s continued implementation of its strategic planning and leadership development platform with Lee A. Tolbert’s leadership team through the duration of the 2018-2019 school year.

Fellows K12 Perform and Words Liive did not apply for grant funding.

Keep reading below the video.

“LEANLAB has iterated on its grant making process over the years, working to both empower the education community in its funding decisions and increase the ventures’ impact on local schools,” the program said in a press release. “In prior years, LEANLAB has disbursed two $25,000 awards to teams demonstrating business viability. This year’s grant making process departed from that tradition, focusing instead on both the research findings gathered throughout the fellowship process and opportunities for ventures to continue their work in local schools beyond the three-month fellowship period.   

The $60,000 in grant investments will impact more than 700 Kansas City area students through the 2018-2019 school year, LEANLAB said.

“At the end of the day, our work is about transforming learning outcomes for the young people of Kansas City. We wanted our funding decisions to reflect that commitment, and to empower our local schools in the process,” said Boody. “All funding decisions were determined by our school partners as we continually work to elevate the voices and power of those most impacted by public education — parents, students and teachers.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

2018 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Olathe restaurateur brings comfort food home from the Mediterranean (starting with falafel bowls)

    By Tommy Felts | February 17, 2025

    Summer Salem looked around her city for an authentic Mediterranean restaurant and found a gap in the Olathe marketplace. So a year ago she began planning one of her own. She teamed with her husband, Abraham, who also is a partner in a downtown Kansas City Mediterranean restaurant. But the recipes would be Summer’s own.…

    Cook to CEO: Chad Offerdahl sticks to Big Biscuit basics as breakfast industry trends funky — ‘That’s not us’

    By Tommy Felts | February 15, 2025

    Chad Offerdahl’s journey with The Big Biscuit didn’t start in an office — it began in the kitchen, explained the CEO of the fast-growing, locally owned breakfast brand. That’s where he first learned the classics that define the company, its mission and the menu. “I started as a cook,” said Offerdahl. “I trained in the…

    How this founder’s hobby (plus a little trouble) became Oak Park retail incubator’s biggest success story 

    By Tommy Felts | February 14, 2025

    “Big Chunky Blankets” — soft as a baby’s cheek and custom knitted in any color of the rainbow — folded into the foundation of what would become Maryann Nzioki Hult’s resilient, nearly pandemic-proof foray into entrepreneurship. They put local Tabu Knits on the online map of must-have-items, and then became the seed of two Johnson…

    Big win for UMKC: Unlocking top tier research status gives KC new competitive edge

    By Tommy Felts | February 14, 2025

    A new milestone for the University of Missouri-Kansas City — achieving status as Kansas City’s first Carnegie R1 research institution — is expected to help boost the region’s ability to start, grow and scale more startups, leaders said this week, emphasizing the role university-led research plays in innovation across industries and communities. “It’s absolutely massive…