LEANLAB earns another top-tier funder with $76K+ grant from Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

June 6, 2019  |  Startland News Staff

Katie Boody, LEANLAB Education Leanlab Gates Foundation

A hefty new grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation will allow LEANLAB Education to expand its incoming 2019 K12 Fellowship from six to 10 innovation teams, Katie Boody said.

The $76,500 in funding also allows the education accelerator to grow beyond pilot sites to form the Visionary School Network and award honorariums to educators implementing innovative solutions, added Boody, CEO of LEANLAB.

“This year we’re prioritizing feedback from educators in real school settings,” she said. “Our entrepreneurs will work closely with educators to validate their products and make sure they’re really working for students. We believe that this process will create better innovations that are working to solve our schools’ most pressing problems.”

LEANLAB Education is the first organization in the region to attract the support of both the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative and the Gates Foundation, said Alexander Sheppard, marketing and fund development coordinator. The funding organizations are the philanthropic arms of the founders of Facebook and Microsoft, respectively.

“With their support, we’re excited to grow our footprint and impact even more students throughout the Kansas City metro region and beyond,” Sheppard said.

Applications for the 2019 K12 Fellowship are now open through June 16.

Click here to learn more or apply.

The K12 Fellowship is an accelerator program, spanning from August to January, for startup ventures focused on solving real problems within education. Cohort 6 Fellows will work with schools in Kansas City to validate their products or services within a real classroom setting.

Historically, LEANLAB has only accepted six companies into the K12 Fellowship but additional funding has allowed a larger, more-tiered system of success. The top six companies will be chosen by school leaders at the pilot sites and will receive a $10,000 honorarium. The next four top-rated teams will work alongside the other fellows in the intensive curriculum portion of the fellowship, focusing on K12 sales strategy and business viability.

In the past five years, 34 entrepreneurs have been through the K12 Fellowship. They have gone on to raise over $6M in investment and have impacted over 1.9 million students across the United States since 2013 and 19,786 students in Kansas City last year alone.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

2019 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    KC engineering firm with global reach earns Chamber equity award for its community-focused blueprint

    By Tommy Felts | June 14, 2024

    Editor’s note: The Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce is a non-financial partner of Startland News, which serves as the media partner for the Small Business Superstars program. Equity is infused in everything Taliaferro & Browne engineers, said Leonard Graham, accepting the KC Chamber’s Small Business Equity Award alongside co-owner Hagos Andebrhan.  One of Kansas…

    Best in show: Bar K vies for USA Today’s dog bar prize; here’s how a shared love of dogs is pushing expansion

    By Tommy Felts | June 13, 2024

    The human-dog bond — and a desire to embrace it at places like Bar K’s innovative bar, restaurant, and dog park experience — is stronger than today’s often partisan and divisive climate, said David Hensley. “It doesn’t matter your political affiliations … where you’re from, your socioeconomic status,” he said. “Everybody loves dogs, and that…

    Firm with deep KC ties wins Small Business of the Year thanks to tenacity, hyperlocal focus

    By Tommy Felts | June 13, 2024

    Editor’s note: The Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce is a non-financial partner of Startland News, which serves as the media partner for the Small Business Superstars program. A decades-long commitment to Kansas City clients — and the belief that rising tides lift all ships — helped propel Walz Tetrick Advertising to the award stage…

    How this genre-hopping KC musician is fighting back against digitized entertainment

    By Tommy Felts | June 13, 2024

    A former college football star, Keelon Vann often found himself “running on fumes” as he chased his passion on the field — and on key. “I’d be up playing guitar until 3 a.m., which is not a joke, and somehow make it to 5:30 a.m. workouts the next day,” said Vann, a quarterback at Piper High…