KC founder’s hip hop edtech app for children, families earns earns $50K in 5G innovation competition

September 11, 2024  |  Startland News Staff

Roy Scott, Healthy Hip Hop, is pictured with young people during a photo shoot for the Catalyst grants program; photo courtesy of Catalyst, CTIA Wireless Foundation

A grants program focused on boosting social entrepreneurs — traditionally underfunded women and persons of color — who are using 5G wireless innovation to address pressing community challenges this week awarded a $50,000 prize to Kansas City startup Healthy Hip Hop for its work on child literacy.

Catalyst — a competitive grants initiative by the Washington, DC-based CTIA Wireless Foundation — recognized founder Roy Scott and Healthy Hip Hop for the startup’s innovative, mobile app-based solution, which is helping improve students’ reading and writing skills through the engaging power of hip hop music.

Roy Scott, Healthy Hip Hop, is pictured with young people during a photo shoot for the Catalyst grants program; photo courtesy of Catalyst, CTIA Wireless Foundation

“According to the U.S. Department of Education, two-thirds of students in the U.S. are reading below grade level by fourth grade. However, many can repeat their favorite song lyrics with ease,” Catalyst said in a release about the award. “Healthy Hip Hop founder Roy Scott was inspired by his own lived experience and his passion for music to create an educational solution that resonates with students and uplifts youth in a culturally responsive way.”

Grant winners were expected to be honored Thursday at a reception in the nation’s capital.

Healthy Hip Hop has a storied history in and outside Kansas City, having journeyed through such programs as the Regnier Venture Creation Challenge at UMKC, and multiple LEANLAB and LaunchKC cohorts, St. Louis’ Arch Grants program, Techstars Atlanta, and Google’s Black Founders Fund.

It even earned a Changemaker Award at the 2023 AltCap Your Biz competition.

Click here to learn more about Healthy Hip Hop’s origins.

Catalyst is in the fifth year as the CTIA Wireless Foundation’s signature initiative.

Committed to supporting social entrepreneurs that may face barriers to accessing capital, the program’s awardees are led by a member/members of the Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC) communities, and more than 60 percent of the organizations are led by a person whose gender identity is female.

Watch a video about Healthy Hip Hop below, then keep reading for more winners.

In addition to Healthy Hip Hop, winners included:

  • UPchieve, Brooklyn, New York ($100,000) — A mobile app that provides free tutoring and college counseling to low-income students, available 24/7.
  • Maro, Bozeman, Montana ($50,000) — A mobile app for parents that works across school, home and clinic to support the early intervention and risk detection of mental health issues in students age 7 to 18.
  • Palmplug, Seattle ($10,000) — A computer hardware manufacturing company that creates multi-sensory wearables that enhance human interaction; combining hand tracking, haptic feedback, and visual cues to deliver immersive experiences for applications looking to go beyond the screen.
  • Patientory, Atlanta ($10,000) — A Web3 innovative app where healthy choices earn users $PTOY crypto rewards, making health a game they actually want to play.

“These social entrepreneurs are creating mobile-first solutions that take advantage of the speed and efficiency of wireless to address issues across education equality, child literacy, and youth mental health,” said Dori Kreiger, executive director of CTIA Wireless Foundation.

Backers of the grants program include: Qualcomm, iconectiv, AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon, Wilkinson Barker Knauer LLP, American Tower, Assurant, DLA Piper, Ellipsis Productions and Wiley Rein.

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

      2024 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        SewKC at Collective Ex

        How an elastic team turned an early tip about face masks into SewKC’s saving grace

        By Tommy Felts | October 30, 2020

        Editor’s note: The following is the third in a series of stories about Kansas City fashion companies putting their own creative spin on the often-utilitarian face mask. As demand for face masks surged this spring, a massive and sustained influx of traffic and orders at SewKC crashed the Crossroads creatives’ online retail engine — forcing the…

        Johnny and Michele Dawbarn, SewKC

        Married to collaboration: SewKC couple stitches meaning into each hand-sewn design

        By Tommy Felts | October 30, 2020

        Michele and Johnny Dawbarn’s symbiotic studio space in the Crossroads allows the always-evolving creative duo to do more than finish each other’s sentences. It stitches ideas to passion, threading a common mission through their businesses, they said. “When you sew-” Johnny began. “You bring two things together,” finished Michele, co-founder of SewKC with her husband.…

        Donnelly College, Kansas City, Kansas

        Donnelly College in KCK partners with EPA to support student research, job training 

        By Tommy Felts | October 29, 2020

        Recognized as the most ethnically diverse college in the Midwest, Donnelly College is continuing to serve its primarily first-generation and minority students through a partnership with the Environmental Protection Agency, Lisa Stoothoff said. “The real goal is for our first-generation college students to have a pathway from what they are learning in the classroom to…

        Arvelisha Woods and India Monique, Mattie’s Foods

        How two hungry vegan sisters went from making queso to their own storefront on Holmes

        By Tommy Felts | October 29, 2020

        Arvelisha Woods and India Monique just wanted to style hair and eat nachos, the duo said, breaking into laughter.  “It all started with being hungry,” Monique recalled, with Woods emphasizing the “hungry.” The sisters behind Mattie’s Foods went on a fast in 2015 as part of their mission work. They took what they loved the…