From KC to Down Under, expanded LEANLAB attracts education innovators to latest fellowship

September 12, 2019  |  Startland News Staff

Ten companies arriving Friday to LEANLAB Education’s latest fellowship are expected to be met with real-world classroom partners from nine school systems in the Kansas City metro and Colorado.

Katie Boody, LEANLAB Education

Katie Boody, LEANLAB Education

“When those closest to the issues in education — teachers, parents and students — have access to cutting-edge innovators and researchers, they’ll be able to collectively create technologies and tools that have unprecedented student outcomes,” said Katie Boody, CEO of LEANLAB. “This year, we took this work to the next level.” 

The six-month accelerator this year is introducing its Visionary School Network, a collection of school sites that will serve as living pilot locations for its fellowship. The companies are seeking to create breakthroughs in a variety of instructional areas, including: increasing academic vocabulary, targeting math interventions, supporting social emotional learning, increasing family engagement, and increasing real-world relevancy in the classroom.

The program culminates Jan. 22 at Scale Day, where the education startups and their school partners plan to share the results of their research pilots.

Edgar J. Palacios, Latinx Ed Collaborative

Brian Kearns, LCTE Gig

Brian Kearns, LCTE Gig

Two Kansas City companies are among the fellowship’s members: CTE Gig, led by veteran startup founder Brian Kearns; and Latinx Ed Collaborative, led by longtime nonprofit organizer Edgar J. Palacios.

“I am excited to be surrounded by other founders and learn from them,” said Palacios. “I have seen how other ventures have grown with support of LEANLAB and am looking forward to the experience. And it’s cool to be part of a nationally-recognized, local accelerator program.”

LEANLAB attracted more than 120 applicants from six continents to its fellowship program this year, ultimately whittling the list down to the following 10 companies:

  • CTE Gig, Kansas City — CTE Gig is a software platform that builds awareness, while lowering stigma to develop career connections over time that form a pipeline, so more students, especially women, and underrepresented groups can enter these careers.
  • Latinx Collaborative, Kansas City — The Latinx Ed Collaborative aggressively seeds education pipelines with quality Latinx talent while building a supportive community of Latinx education professionals to proactively address attrition.
  • Emote, Oakland, California — Emote continually collects and analyzes SEL (socio-emotional learning) data to deliver insights to the right person at the right time — empowering schools to deliver proactive support to 100 percent of students with existing staff. (Network partner: Benjamin Banneker Elementary, Kansas City Public Schools; Guadalupe Centers High School, Guadalupe Centers)
  • Floop, Seattle — Floop is a web and mobile platform that helps teachers give meaningful feedback faster and teaches students to use feedback to learn. (Network partner: Van Horn High School, Independence School District)
  • Flyer Connect, Denver, Colorado — Flyer Connect empowers families to get engaged with their children’s education and gives schools a simple yet powerful platform to keep families informed and participating. (Network partner: San Juan BOCES)
  • Indigo, Niwot, Colorado — Indigo is a sophisticated data platform that delivers real-time actionable insights to students, parents, teachers, counselors, and administrators. (Network partner: Blue Valley CAPS, Blue Valley USD)
  • Intervene, Houston — Intervene is a comprehensive intervention system that assesses students, analyzes data, and tutors students online in groups of four, to provide accessible, high impact tutoring to schools and districts. (Network partner: KIPP Endeavor Academy, KIPP Public Charter Schools)
  • Makers Empire, Adelaide, South Australia — Makers Empire helps K-8 educators teach design thinking, STEM and 21st-century learning skills with 3D printing and 3D design so they develop the critical thinking, design thinking, creative, collaborative and problem-solving skills and growth mindset they’ll need to thrive in the future. (Network partner: Academy for Integrated Arts, Operation Breakthrough)
  • Speak Agent, Rockville, Maryland — Speak Agent is a breakthrough digital platform that empowers diverse learners of all ages to quickly and deeply master challenging academic language and concepts critical for success in schools and careers, accelerating learning by three times with only 30 minutes of use per week. (Network partner: KIPP Endeavor Academy, KIPP Public Charter Schools)
  • School Deets, Denver, Colorado — School Deets is a simple and effective communication platform that fixes disjointed school to home communication by providing one app for everyone. Admin, teachers, family liaisons, secretaries, parent volunteers, community members, etc can all use the same platform to easily reach parents. (Network partner: Excelsior Springs High School, Excelsior Springs School District)

International innovator Mandi Dimitriadis, director of learning for Australian education company Makers Empire, looks forward to working within classrooms like those at Kansas City’s Operation Breakthrough, she said.

“At Makers Empire, we believe that every child can make their world better,” said Dimitriadis. We would love to equip every child in the world with critical, creative and design thinking skills and access to 3D design and printing tools, so that they are empowered to solve problems for themselves and others. We are thrilled to be able to bring our program to the children in Kansas City.”

The new fellowship is the latest in a string of headlines from the growing LEANLAB operation. Earlier this year, LEANLAB announced funding from national philanthropies Chan Zuckerberg Initiative and The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

[adinserter block="4"]

2019 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Missouri’s weapon in the AI race with China: KC tech companies, says GOP lawmaker

    By Tommy Felts | October 16, 2025

    As artificial intelligence reshapes the way Kansas City works, civic and elected leaders want to ensure small businesses and the region’s tech community have seats at the table. Federal regulation could help, said Eric Schmitt. “For me, [it’s about] making sure that the big tech companies don’t block out a lot of the innovators, say…

    ECJC carves out early-stage startup track for its popular mentoring program: GMS-Tech

    By Tommy Felts | October 16, 2025

    After a decade boosting Kansas City founders, Growth Mentoring Service at ECJC is expanding to target assistance specifically toward the region’s early-stage technology startups — using the same proven approach: high-impact, team-based mentoring from top-tier business leaders who’ve already been through it. “We have all these amazing volunteer mentors with deep expertise as either technologists…

    Get tickets to the Starty Party: MidxMidwest opens doors to SXSW-flavored startup-investor summit

    By Tommy Felts | October 16, 2025

    Polsinelli-powered celebration at Knuckleheads puts homegrown headliner, community collaboration on stage A trio of innovation-infused collaborators are taking over Knuckleheads — an East Bottoms landmark that perfectly captures the region’s grit, creativity and unmistakable live music vibe, organizers said — for a new community event to help launch MidxMidwest 2025. Doors open at 5:30 p.m.…

    Spaceman drops tracks: Kansas teen raps a midwest mixtape, says he’s ready to launch

    By Tommy Felts | October 15, 2025

    Give Trip Thomas a phone, and the Olathe Northwest High School senior will get his peers talking. Rapping under the name Spaceman, Thomas is staying grounded as he finds his voice through music, he said, and it sounds a lot like resilience. “Music was my therapy,” said Thomas, who started writing from his bedroom at…