LEANLAB awards $50K in seed grants to 19 Black and Latinx innovators in education
August 28, 2020 | Startland News Staff
Entrepreneurs should reflect the communities they serve, said Katie Boody — a charge even more critical when innovative work touches Kansas City’s diverse public school systems, she added.
“I know firsthand how challenging launching a startup can be for anyone, and especially for founders of color,” said Boody, co-founder and CEO of LEANLAB Education, announcing the first recipients of the non-profit’s $50,000 Micro-Grant Support Fund. “All the entrepreneurs we support do this work because of a desire to improve the way we educate all students. This fund supports the next generation of founders who want to develop innovations and non-profits from the big ideas they’ve created in their own classrooms and communities.”
The initiative awarded grants of up to $5,000 to 19 Black and Latinx innovators — either alumni of LEANLAB’s K12 Fellowship (cohorts 1 through 6) or Kansas City-based ventures — who are working toward a better education for Kansas City children, according to LEANLAB. Eighty-nine percent of the selected entrepreneurs are local.
Click here to read more about LEANLAB’s plan to boost its K12 Fellowship with $2 million in new Chan Zuckerberg and Gates Foundation grants.
Micro-grant recipients were selected based on their commitment to increasing access to quality learning opportunities in alignment with LEANLAB’s core values — boldness, human-centered design and equity, Boody said.
Innovation-led recipients likely familiar to Startland News readers include BAM, Healthy Hip Hop, the Latinx Education Collaborative, Pennez, PlaBook, Urban TEC and We Code KC.
Click here to learn more about LEANLAB Education.
“We know that it has been a tough time for organizations and ventures making it through the logistical and health burdens of COVID-19 as well as the emotional and psychological burdens of ongoing efforts to achieve racial justice,” said Rohan Pidaparti, manager of innovation programs for LEANLAB. “Our conversations with alumni and local entrepreneurs reveal an immediate need for financial support, with 83 percent of surveyed entrepreneurs describing a financial need to continue operating through this school year.”
Black entrepreneurs, on-average, start businesses with 67 percent less in capital than white entrepreneurs, according to LEANLAB; and on top of that, this pandemic has hit black and Latinx business the hardest. From February to April, 41 percent of black and 32 percent of Latinx-owned businesses closed, while only 17 percent of white-owned businesses closed.
The full list of recipients of the Micro-Grant Support Fund, made possible by gifts from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, includes:
- aSTEAM Village, William Wells (Kansas City) — Cradle-to-career STEM/STEaM education programming with a targeted focus on addressing the mismatch between supply and demand for 21st Century digital skills. ($2,500)
- BAM, Clint Velazquez (Kansas City, alumni) — BAM’s private lessons combine the benefits of a mentor relationship with music education to create an environment where students feel safe to grow and develop life skills. ($5,000)
- BLOC, Cornell Ellis (Kansas City) — Brothers Liberating Our Communities aims to sustain and ultimately retain black men in schools. ($2,500)
- Diversity Talks, Kiara Butler (Providence, Rhode Island, alumni) — Increases the cultural competence of educators by providing youth-led professional development grounded in diversity equity and inclusion. ($1,000)
- Elements of Education KC, Catina Taylor (Kansas City, alumni) — Provides a network of support and a safe space for black female education professionals to express issues with the system while offering healthy solutions. ($2,500)
- Generation Prodigy, LaTonya Stephens (Kansas City) — Closes the gap in educational matriculation between low-income and wealthy students by providing programs that increase school attendance and critical thinking skills. ($5,000)
- Healthy Hip Hop, Roy Scott (Kansas City, alumni) — EdTech platform combining education, cutting-edge technology and positive attributes within the hip-hop culture to improve learning environments, focus and engagement. ($2,500)
- Hold Em Up 4 Care, Tiffany Price (Kansas City) — Free measuring, fitting, and bra donations for young Kansas City women. ($1,000)
- Inspired Aesthetics, Cescily Phillips (Kansas City) — After school program for grades 9-12 that provides access to safe top-quality, year-round arts education and training, mentoring, and academic support. ($2,500)
- Jathen Corporation, JC Gibbs (Kansas City) — Tech solutions pre-loaded with resources for homeless and at-risk youth in Kansas City. ($1,000)
- KCMO Memorial Scholarship, Susanna Elizarraraz (Kansas City) — The KCMO Memorial Scholarship scholarship will offer siblings of the victims of gun violence hope through access to post-secondary education and beyond. ($3,000)
- LEC, Edgar Palacios (Kansas City, alumni) — The Latinx Education Collaborative works to increase the representation of Latinx US education professionals in K-12. ($2,500)
- Pennez, Rebecca Dove (Kansas City) — Pennez utilizes Machine Learning to help youth to become better readers. ($1,500)
- PlaBook, Philip Hickman (Kansas City) — Innovative reading technology that uses artificial intelligence, natural language processing, and speech recognition to help children learn to read. ($2,500)
- Sankofa Leadership Institute, David Muhammad (Kansas City) — Sankofa Leadership Initiative works to use martial arts as a form of access to leadership for youth from a diverse set of communities. ($2,500)
- Teachers Like Me, Dr. Trinity Davis (Kansas City) — Organization dedicated to recruiting, developing, and retaining Black teachers in the Kansas City area. ($2,500)
- Urban TEC, Ina Montgomery (Kansas City) — Delivers Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Mathematics programs to teachers and students that will engage students with their teachers’ lessons and opportunities in the field. ($5,000)
- WeCode KC, Tammy Buckner (Kansas City) — Prepares underserved youth in urban communities with the skills to become full-stack software developers, web developers, computer programmers, and project managers. ($2,500)
- Words Liive, Sage Salvo (Washington D.C., alumni) — Words Liive systemically integrates the music their students love, via song lyrics, into their reading and writing assignments to prepare engaging and effective literacy lessons. ($2,500)
Featured Business

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
It’s not too late to preserve KC’s Black-owned restaurants (or to enjoy Black Feast Week)
The recent closures of Soiree, The Krave, and Privee — Black-owned restaurants that each became a staple of Kansas City’s evolving food scene — leave a clear void that can’t be ignored, said Ryan Sorrell. An initiative to help save local culinary should-be hotspots in similar danger wraps this week, but the work to promote and…
Ancestry.com founder-turned-AI evangelist says rapidly advancing tech can uplift humanity, families
People across the globe are caught in an internet malaise, said Paul Allen, and tech visionaries’ response should be to renew humans’ dependence on faith and family and friendship and local community. One of their most critical tools, he said: decidedly non-human solutions from the rapidly evolving landscape of artificial intelligence. Allen — founder of…
KC filmmaker sees pleasure as a prequel to dystopia hiding ‘In Plain Sight’; His brave new wake-up call
Thomas Rex’s new proof-of-concept film project envisions a near-future world where society is on the verge of totalitarian control, he said, describing a cautionary tale about being unknowingly controlled by a culture of escapism through pleasure and pharmaceuticals. “In Plain Sight” serves as a prelude to Aldous Huxley’s novel “Brave New World,” an acclaimed but…
New owner plans Vietnamese redux with modernized experience at Northland bánh mi spot
Quick service. Customization. Simple menu. Meals made-to-order in front of the customer. Chipotle was built on this service model. Now Peter Nguyen wants to bring it to his new Vietnamese restaurant, and even use that system to start a franchise of his own. In August, Nguyen purchased the former Bun Mee Phan restaurant at 4011…



