Laura Gilchrist: What KC can learn from Silicon Valley education

June 9, 2016  |  Laura Gilchrist

Laura Gilchrist Silicon Valley education

Editor’s note: The opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone.


A few weeks ago, several of my fellow educators and I toured five innovative Bay Area schools. Being in the heart of Silicon Valley, it’s no surprise that educators there understand the importance of finding new ways to engage and educate kids in an ever-changing, tech-focused world.

Innovation and learner agency — the idea that education is the vessel through which learners develop independent thinking skills — is a top priority of Bay Area schools. The results of such prioritization shine bright in both kids and teachers.

Here are a few observations:

Silicon Valley education

Students at Redwood Heights Elementary in Oakland, CA. Photo by Laura Gilchrist.

  • Students and teachers worked together to write and set up learning around kids’ personalized vision and individual learning goals, and teachers autonomously crafted classroom design to fit kids’ needs and develop project-based learning.
  • Parents were accepted as leaders in the school’s education ecosystem and were welcome to drop by to help kids learn at any time.
  • Teachers and students alike were encouraged to innovate and think big. Students served as ambassadors. They led tours, organized school and community projects, and worked with teachers to design their own learning environments.

Although innovation is happening in Kansas City schools, too, the status quo of hierarchical, traditional leadership and an overemphasis on testing and data are still common. Innovation is not a word you hear frequently ringing through the halls of local schools — yet!

So how can we, as a city full of genius minds and big hearts, work together to empower our youth to create, learn, and lead both in school and the community? Schools can’t — and shouldn’t have to — do it alone. They can only benefit from the community’s entrepreneurial mindset, expertise and knowledge.

Here a few lessons I learned on how we can make all this happen:

1. First and foremost, we need to understand that innovation can be done NOW, in any school, on any budget, and with all kids and communities.

The Bay Area schools showed me that innovation is about mindset, intentionality and passion; not about shiny new buildings, expensive equipment, or years of comprehensive planning. Just start. It will grow.

2. Start “Innovate NOW” with school-wide public exhibition night(s) of student projects.

Each and every one of the five schools I toured had at least one public, open-to-the-community exhibition night per school year. Some schools had as many as one a quarter. Whatever the frequency, these nights were huge motivators for kids and their families. Kids, parents and the community had fun together while sending a message that student work and education are valued as a community affair.

3. Organize regular parent and/or community walk-throughs for feedback and ideas.

One of the Bay Area schools hosts monthly parent walk-throughs during the school day that are essentially reverse tours. Parents give their observations, feedback, and ideas on how to better meet student needs to their tour guide.

Springboarding from that concept, what if we also invited the local innovation community? What ideas might local startups, founders and their employees have about how to bring an entrepreneurial mindset into the classroom? We won’t know until we ask!

4. Embrace social media for storytelling and learning.

Thanks to technology, the walls at our schools separating us from the community figuratively don’t exist, but many schools still operate as if they do.

Cindy Avitia High School has an Instagram account where everyone from the principal down to the students share stories, engage and collaborate with the community. They also have a Twitter, Facebook, Snapchat, Youtube, and school blog. Teachers at Katherine Smith Elementary tweet and use professional learning networks on Twitter to connect with resources and ideas.

The end result is more resources for students and teachers and more involvement from the local innovation community — on platforms the community is already using and which cost nothing to get started.

These simple starting points can be the impetus through which we grow bigger and better ideas for kids’ future. The key is enabling more flexibility for schools and teachers to try new things, and engaging parents and the surrounding community.

See Gilchrist’s full KC Great Schools — Silicon Valley Tour photo album here.


In addition to being a Turner High School instructional coach, Laura Gilchrist is an award-winning educator, KCedu organizer and member of the Kansas Education Redesign Team. Connect with Laura on Twitter @LauraGilchrist4.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

2016 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Keith Bradley, Made in KC

    The future is local: How masks helped neighbors look each other in the eyes again

    By Tommy Felts | December 27, 2021

    Editor’s note: The opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone. Keith Bradley is co-owner of Made in KC, a brick-and-mortar and online retailer of locally made goods with neighborhood, marketplace and cafe locations downtown, on the Country Club Plaza, in Lee’s Summit, Lenexa, and across the metro. [divide] As we wind down our…

    The Innovator Awards recognize innovativeness and marketability of project ideas in Project Lead The Way's biomedical science and engineering capstone courses. (File photo by Charles Maples)

    How intersecting K-12 student competitions build design thinking, inventiveness and an entrepreneurial mindset

    By Tommy Felts | October 26, 2021

    Editor’s note: The opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone. Callen Fairchild Zind is communications manager for the KC STEM Alliance. [divide] How do you prepare for a career when the world is changing at such a rapid pace that no one can quite envision what jobs of the future will look like? In…

    The Innovation Studio, Robert W. Plaster Free Enterprise and Research Center, UMKC

    UMKC unveils innovation studio, inviting students, entrepreneurs to collaborate within $32M research center

    By Tommy Felts | September 29, 2021

    In a hiring environment where college graduates are expected to possess honed skills for even entry-level positions, a state-of-the-art innovation studio in the heart of Kansas City allows students access to technology to actually build products within their chosen professions. “We have never had a facility like this — with the diversity of equipment and…

    Fall 2019 Elevation Lab Tech Venture cohort with Sally Williams; front row, Jerren Thornhill, Kwinton Scarbrough, Sally Williams, Aaron Monson, Jeremy Williams, and Juaquan Herron; back row, Rodney McDuffie, Zach Davis, James Bailey, David Biga, Jordan Williams, Hassan Ali, and former SBDC counselor Ryan Comeau

    Microwave meals to dating apps: How Sally Williams harnesses the power of new products for founders

    By Tommy Felts | September 20, 2021

    After 40 years in the game, a nearly lifelong career might leave little room for surprises. Yet for Sally Williams, every rise of the sun brings new opportunities, revolving largely around Kansas City’s potential to push the bounds of innovation, she said.  “I have clients who have products in the International Space Station and I…