Chan Zuckerberg funds KC nonprofit to help AI tech empower educators, innovators
October 17, 2024 | Tommy Felts
A nearly $1 million grant from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative is expected to help a Kansas City-based nonprofit expand and strengthen the infrastructure of its national education research and development coalition, its founder said.

Katie Boody Adorno, Leanlab Education, speaks during a launch event for AGILE Network in June in Denver; photo courtesy of Leanlab Education
The funding specifically supports Leanlab Education’s American Group of Innovative Learning Environments (AGILE) Network, a national education R&D network and collective impact initiative seeking to bolster education R&D infrastructure, said Katie Boody Adorno, CEO and founder of Leanlab Education.
“We’ve grown from a locally-focused organization to a national distributed team with global initiatives — though we’re still working closely with local partners in the AGILE Network,” Boody Adorno told Startland News. “This funding highlights the momentum in the field to promote ecosystem collaboration and alignment, better understand AI edtech, and ensure that edtech products are evidence-based, effective, and codesigned with learners and teachers.
Leanlab was among three grantees funded by the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative to explore the impact of artificial intelligence on teaching and learning in the school, with a specific focus on inclusion of diverse and underrepresented voices.
“In the age of AI, traditional research timelines are insufficient to keep up with the pace of education technology development — leaving us unable to understand if these emerging technologies are helping students or not,” said Boody Adorno. “AGILE solves this problem by creating an on-demand network of research-ready school sites that are eager to engage in R&D that is ethical, non-extractive, and aligned to their areas of interest.”
READ MORE: In the age of AI, edtech needs inclusive innovation more than ever
Leanlab Education organized a launch event for AGILE Network in June in Denver.
Building a robust AGILE Network will not only support Leanlab’s codesign product research infrastructure, Boody Adorno said, but the research efforts of partners like CZI, AERDF, Digital Promise, and ISTE, and the capacity and influence of education partners.
“The Chan Zuckerberg Initiative is thrilled to support LeanLab as they expand their infrastructure to bring together more K-12 educators and edtech developers to co-design research-based tools,” Sandra Liu Huang, head of education and vice president of product at the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, told Startland News.
“Leanlab cares deeply about ensuring educators play an active role in developing education technology and making it more effective,” she continued. “We know from co-building technology with educators in their network that it makes a difference for students.”
Leanlab previously earned grants from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative in 2019 and 2020.
The Kansas City-built nonprofit plans to release a report on themes from its AI edtech research later this fall.
Now a nationally recognized education research operation, Leanlab evolved from an incubator/accelerator model — boosting such high-profile edtech startups as Boddle Learning, Healthy Hip Hop, Transportant and Base Academy of Music (BAM) — when Boody Adorno and her team realized that while they had successfully launched commercially viable ventures, they didn’t know a lot about Leanlab’s impact, she said.
“We then learned that most education technology tools have little third-party evidence measuring if they work for students and teachers, with only 26 of the 100 most used tools having federal ESSA standard aligned research,” said Boody Adorno. “We believe that when we co-build products in partnership with school communities, they’re more likely to be used with fidelity, and thus more likely lead to positive impacts on student outcomes.”
RELATED: Kansas City-built Boddle earns $500K Yass Prize Finalist Award, hits 2M monthly users
“We’ve now built out a full internal research team that can facilitate both the co-building and evaluation process so that we can really understand what education products are working, for whom, and in what context,” she added.
Click here to learn more about Leanlab’s team of experts.
In the past two years, Leanlab has experienced significant growth, Boody Adorno said, noting demand for its codesign research services increased dramatically; it launched two new educator R&D networks (AGILE Network and the Codesign Collective); was a founding member of the Global Edtech Testbed Network; and it expanded Leanlab’s research services to effectively study AI education technology — a key priority for the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative and its grantmaking.
Each of the grantees was also chosen, in part, for their specific work and focus on diverse voices, ensuring that underrepresented students and teachers have a seat at the table, according to the funder, which announced $2.5 million distributed between Education First, the International Society for Technology (ISTE), and Leanlab.
“The funding also highlights Leanlab’s position as a leader in this work and a trusted partner of school communities, edtech entrepreneurs, and impact-oriented funders,” Boody Adorno. “We’re excited to further grow the AGILE Network beyond 20 learning environments, codesign AI tools with our partners, and share learnings with the field.”
Featured Business

2024 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Google Fiber hops to new, pricier plans for businesses
All good things — or in this case inexpensive things — must come to an end. Google Fiber will soon nix early-access pricing for its gigabit business service and will more than double its costs for new customers in August. Google Fiber — which first arrived in Kansas City in 2012 with residential service —…
Amazon to bring 1,000 jobs, huge facility to KCK
Online retail giant Amazon will open a massive new facility in Kansas City, Kan. The Seattle-based company announced Monday that it will create more than 1,000 full-time jobs and construct an 855,000-square-foot fulfillment facility near the Turner Diagonal on I-70 in Kansas City, Kan. “These aren’t just any jobs. They are the best entry-level jobs our…
Survey: KC is sticky for startups with equity funding
A majority of Kansas City startups choose to maintain their hometown roots after they raise capital — even when the funds come from outside investors, a recent survey found. Of the companies that raised money in 2013 and 2014, 74 percent of them are still active and headquartered in the City of Fountains, according to…
A marriage of Mr. K’s passions, ‘E Day at the K’ returns July 19
To say one of Kansas City’s greatest entrepreneurs — Ewing Marion Kauffman — loved baseball would be an understatement. The founder of Marion Laboratories Inc., Kauffman purchased the Royals in 1968 to bring America’s pastime to his beloved hometown, Kansas City. Along with boosting civic pride, the Royals became a model franchise, employing “moneyball” statistical…



