Google’s $100K ‘stamp of approval’ for PlaBook reads like validation for KC-built edtech startup

September 16, 2022  |  Nikki Overfelt Chifalu

Philip Hickman, PlaBook

Kansas City expatriate PlaBook is set to receive $100,000 from Google’s initiative to provide funding to Black-led startups. But for Philip Hickman, it’s not just about the funding, he said. It’s also a credibility boost.

“We were happy to receive an investment from Google,” the edtech startup founder said. “It’s a stamp of approval to really validate our tool. We’ve won other awards like (being a semifinalist at the GSV Cup). But this was a validation. This was Google.”

Related: KC startup earns $100K from Google initiative, funding its ‘food as medicine’ tech solution for chronic illnesses, healthy food inequity

Although Hickman moved PlaBook to St. Louis in 2021 to take advantage of the Arch Grants program, he previously was a mainstay of the Kansas City tech scene. He is a 2022 member of the elite Pipeline Entrepreneurs fellowship and a veteran of Techstars Kansas City, Digital Sandbox KC, and LaunchKC.

PlaBook uses artificial intelligence, natural language processing, speech recognition, and gamification to help children learn how to read.

Click here to explore PlaBook’s reading and mathematics tech.

When creating its products, according to Hickman, PlaBook didn’t use a third party tool but developed its own speech engine. Unlike Google’s speech engine, which uses an adult data set, PlaBook employs a child speech data set, plus it takes into account accents and regional dialects.

“So it was a little bit more difficult to develop our proprietary technology around that because children’s voices change so fast,” he explained. “One minute, they’re squeaking. One minute, they’re dropping and getting deep and cracking. Then the next minute, they have front teeth, and the next second, they don’t have front teeth.”

Without such technology, he said, reading assessments are done by having a child read a paragraph and answer some multiple choice questions. Or younger children might be asked to do tasks like, for example, dragging and dropping a picture of an apple under the letter A.

“For the first time, we’re not only able to hear a child read, (but) use AI to analyze their readings and tell you exactly reading level error, accuracy, oral reading proficiency — all those things — comprehension,” he continued. “But we’re also able to hear all the way down to the phonemic level — we’re holding some patents around that — to where we’re able to hear the very unit of speech. … We’re able to give them a profile of the student recommendation engine to be able to tell you exactly what barriers that the child has.” 

The technology is designed to work with teachers, according to Hickman, and be an informative assessment that still functions in a noisy classroom environment.

“We inform and help the teacher use data to drive their instruction and also to personalize learning for kids,” he said. “We do that through our gamification, where we add fun games — but academic games — that take the place of worksheets (and) really help the students grow. It’s personalized, so every time the child is on the platform, it actually wraps around the DNA of that student and it works with the student.”

PlaBook is now being used in the Florissant and Ferguson, Missouri, school districts in the St. Louis area, plus in schools in Texas, Mississippi, Michigan, and New York. The startup is also exploring partnerships with a couple of Kansas City area schools, Hickman said.

Philip Hickman takes the stage, far right, alongside Pipeline’s 2022 fellowship class at the Pipeline Innovators Gala in May 2022

Rewriting the PlaBook

Before joining the startup scene, Hickman was fully immersed in the education world. With his doctorate and five graduate degrees under his belt, he’s worked as a special education teacher in Columbia, a school psychologist in the St. Louis area, an assistant principal in Belleville, Illinois, a principal in the Chicago area, and a superintendent in Houston and Mississippi. Plus he founded the Genesis Charter School in Kansas City.

So he knows first-hand the reading disparities that exist in school districts around the country, he said. Seventy-five percent of students in the U.S. read below grade level; from a minority standpoint, 65 percent of African American students read below basic; and only 18 percent of African American eighth grade students are proficient, Hickman said.

“You have that dichotomy and then you also have 73 percent of crime created in the United States is created by high school dropouts and about 82 percent of prison inmates have a reading impairment that just hasn’t been corrected,” he explained. “You go from a national pandemic (that set fourth grade reading levels back) to somewhat of a civil rights issue – in a sense – that you have a large majority of minorities who are not able to read on grade level, as well. So that was a problem we wanted to take on and look at, why is it a pervasive problem?”

In addition to the $100,000 in non-dilutive funding — which means the funding is not given in exchange for equity in the company — Google will also provide PlaBook with $100,000 in Google Cloud credits, hands-on support from Google employees, and free access to business coaching and mental health services.

Google launched the initiative, officially called the Google for Startups Black Founders Fund, in 2020 as a way to boost economic opportunity in Black communities. In the United States, less than one percent of venture capital goes to Black founders.

Hickman says they plan to use the funding for marketing.

“(We need to) develop a strong sales team, so we can gain market share,” he added. “Our only issue is just getting in front of people’s faces to let them see the platform. Once they see it, they get it and they understand it.”

This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.

For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn

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

      2022 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Rich Smith, president-emeritus, and Kevin Lewis, CEO and president, Henderson Engineers — one of 12 companies in the first cohort of the CEO-to-CEO Challenge

        Meet the 12 KC companies pledging to buy from diverse vendors; Join them in the CEO-to-CEO Challenge

        By Tommy Felts | March 8, 2022

        Editor’s note: The following story was sponsored by KC Rising, a regional initiative to help Kansas City grow faster and more intentionally, as part of a campaign to promote its CEO-to-CEO Challenge on supplier diversity.  A dozen high-profile Kansas City companies are at the vanguard of a new regional effort to boost supplier diversity programs…

        Kharissa Forte, Holistic Hustle, Grace & Grind

        We all need help, honey: Nearly 3/4 of entrepreneurs are haunted by depression (Holistic Hustle)

        By Tommy Felts | March 8, 2022

        Kharissa Forte is a writer, certified health coach, and columnist for Startland News. For more of her self-care tips on how to keep your cup full, visit graceandgrind.co. You did it. After all the nights dreaming about how amazing it could be and overcoming the endless stream of what-ifs that stopped you from moving forward…

        Primary Color Music, Post Haus

        Earworms to the Oscars: They’ve redefined jingle writing, now composing music for motion (pictures)

        By Tommy Felts | March 5, 2022

        Notes of passion are composed throughout every piece of Sam Billen’s entrepreneurial melody. But it’s the most recent crescendo in his career that has him thanking the Academy.  “It sounds cheesy, but it’s actually pretty cool,” said Billen, composer and founding partner of Primary Color Music, detailing the experience of guests who step foot inside…

        Maggie Kenefake, Royal Street Ventures, Clarence Tan, Boddle, and John Thomson, PayIt, during a previous C3KC conference at Union Station

        Innovators can’t do it alone; C3KC conference calls for cross-sector attack on wealth gap, KC’s biggest pain points

        By Tommy Felts | March 4, 2022

        Editor’s note: Startland News is a media sponsor for the Junior League of Kansas City’s C3KC conference. Click here for tickets to the event, which features a keynote address by best-selling author Adam Grant. Challenges abound in Kansas City, Kimberlee Ried acknowledged, but opportunities for innovation to push change are even more plentiful. An in-person conference…