FY 2014 Annual Report “Atlanta`s Most
Transcription
FY 2014 Annual Report “Atlanta`s Most
FY 2014 Annual Report “Atlanta's Most Innovative Venture” By Amarion Rackley, KIPP 5th grader. This is a story of a truck, transformed into a center of imagination & innovation. Hello, We’re Community Guilds Work hard. Tackle problems. Design solutions. Build something. It’s Been an Amazing First Year Dear Friends & Family, Enduring crazy long hours of caffeine-induced inspiration and perspiration. Plummeting into moments of spirit-crushing doubt. Holding on for dear life when everything blows up. Or falls off a truck. The story of the lone entrepreneur runs deep in our culture. Starting a nonprofit is much the same save for one difference: we travel together, not alone. Two years ago, Jason started developing a new educational experience; today, we are celebrating the first anniversary of Community Guilds. Jason’s work was guided by these goals: • Ignite student engagement • Develop traits essential to success including grit, perseverance and collaboration • Increase interest among underrepresented populations in STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) Community Guilds is a startup nonprofit that teaches 21st-century skills the old-fashioned way – by using the mentor-apprentice model to spark engagement, develop ingenuity, and build grit. STE(A)M Truck is our program for primary and middle schoolers. It is a 20-day curriculum centered around our mobile makerspace, and it harnesses the collective expertise of the broader community. We bring maker mentors, STEM designers and local artists together, and have youth tackle real problems, design solutions and build things together. (Note: STEM stands for science, technology, engineering and math. STE(A)M adds art.) Apprenticeships will be our semester-long program for high school students, who will be paired with artists or craftspeople to learn real-world skills that result in physical products. 2 Our general goals are familiar – boost the nation’s third lowest high school graduation rate and increase the percentages of graduates entering and finishing college – and increase the number of students from underrepresented populations that choose STEM careers. Our approach overcomes issues of engagement, expectations and efficacy. • Engaging students is challenging, and relevancy of material is often a factor. • Schools’ and teachers’ expectations of students struggling with STEM sometimes negatively impact students’ expectations of themselves. • After decades of attempted reform, the trajectory of struggling students remains fundamentally unaltered; most public schools are simply not designed to impart the competencies needed to succeed in the 21st century. Reed Dyer • Decrease Georgia’s dropout rate, the nation’s third highest • Stir public school interest in approaches that impart critical skills through tackling practical problems So we engage kids with real-world problems; teach them how to address those problems with real solutions, thus increasing their self-confidence; and incorporate the development of non-cognitive assets such as grit and collaboration that lead to success in school and life. We also level the playing field; most students have limited experience with the tools, equipment, methods and processes that we present, so all students enjoy a fresh start. Like many startups, we zigged and then zagged. As circumstances unfolded, our secondary focus became primary. The idea of a mobile makerspace, as it turns out, resonates with a lot of people. Work hard. Tackle problems. Design solutions. Build something. Community Guilds provides transformational experiences that ignite passions, incite change, and start to close the gap in underrepresentation in STEM careers. Despite all the success of year one, we are truly just beginning. There is so much more to do, so many lives to transform. Thanks again, and welcome to Community Guilds; our road ahead is filled with wondrous journeys. And we’re just getting started. And suddenly we became that proverbial snowball rapidly gaining steam down the mountain. After a year of working with no funding, we soon found ourselves awash in support. After doing almost everything by himself, Jason was working with new partners left and right. And after a small pilot of four students, hundreds of people are now being exposed to the STE(A)M Truck. Jason Martin So this is the story of a truck transformed into a center of imagination and innovation. We are in awe of the kind and generous support we have received, and list all of our contributors on pages 14 and 15. But we would especially like to thank that first anonymous donor, the Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation, the Home Depot Foundation, Cognizant, our pilot schools Kindezi and KIPP WAYS, our teaching artists at WonderRoot, and all the students we have had the privilege to serve; they have allowed us to fail, and we are the better for it. Reed Dyer President, Board of Directors Jason Martin Founder & Executive Director 3 around additional equipment, tools and supplies, and to conduct a pilot with one of the KIPP schools. Transforming a Truck We didn’t plan it this way. When Jason Martin embarked on this journey with the 4.0 Schools fellowship in hand, he developed and piloted a curriculum for a high school apprenticeship program. His STE(A)M Truck program was placed on the back burner due to cost. But in the summer of 2013, Jason found himself telling a potential supporter about his idea for a mobile makerspace that could serve hundreds of students a year. By the end of the conversation, Jason had himself a truck. It was a loaner, but it gave him the opportunity to test out his idea. And not a moment too soon. The Atlanta Mini Maker Faire was only a month away; Jason had only 30 days to retrofit the truck into a makerspace on wheels and make a favorable impression on the Atlanta community. The rest, as they say, is history. Jason’s prototype STE(A)M Truck made its debut at the Maker Faire, and within 30 days, Community Guilds received its first large infusion: $20,000 from the original anonymous donor to buy a truck to replace the loaner. A few months later, the Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation issued a $63,000 grant to retrofit the used truck, to purchase an accompanying trailer to haul Community Guilds also picked up significant funding from the Home Depot Foundation and Cognizant, a Fortune 500 IT services company. Their contributions helped outfit the truck and trailer with all its tools and high-tech equipment including a 3D printer, a CNC router, and a CNC drill press. As for the actual work of transformation, inventor Shane Before 4 Ever the forward-looking executive, Jason said that the most difficult aspect of truck design was scalability. "We went into this wanting to produce not just one STE(A)M Truck, but 16, one for each regional education service agency (RESA) in Georgia," said Jason. "That transformed every purchase into an evaluation of long-term product availability, ease of deployment and use, and potential for in-kind donations." So, what started out as Community Guilds’ secondary project suddenly emerged as the blazing center of attention, and within a few short months, went from words on paper to a fully refurbished and equipped mobile makerspace ready for its first group of eager students. It might seem serendipitous, but like so many that meet with success, we echo the sentiment that "luck favors the prepared." After “I’ve been working hard to help grow our next group of inventors, entrepreneurs and innovators, and the STE(A)M Truck helps fulfill that mission. There’s over $100,000 of very cool technology and equipment on the truck, but the #1 item is passion. Without passion you have nothing.” Shane Matthews: Advisor, ATDC & Advisory Board Member, Community Guilds Matthews, a local maker who holds over a dozen patents, served as principal designer and oversaw the many volunteers whose labor resulted in what we see today. “The maker movement, with enterprises like Community Guilds, is a force whose time has come because the 21st century desperately needs a creative education movement that engages young and old..” Atiba Mbiwan: Associate Director, The Zeist Foundation & Advisory Board Member, Community Guilds Our trailer 5 Transforming Learning The STE(A)M Truck, for all the attention it receives, is merely the physical manifestation of Community Guilds’ underlying goals: to transform learning by providing potentially transformative experiences that leverage active learning principles. By engaging students in real-world problems, analyzing problems, evaluating solutions, and working Spark: On Day 1, the STE(A)M Truck opens its doors to scores of students who explore “what is making” by participating in numerous maker activities. Reverse Engineer: Destruction, it is said, is fundamental to design. Students are guided through a reverse engineering exercise to understand how an object works in order to gain the insight needed to build a new and improved version. 6 collaboratively, we aim to transform actually love to learn. Ultimately, how students see themselves. we hope that many students we serve will stop fearing math and Through our STE(A)M Truck science, and come to see STEM program, we want students to see careers as real possibilities. themselves as problem solvers, designers, builders, and the sort of What distinguishes our offering people who finish what they start. from those of other organizations We seek to create such compelling that leverage the maker movement experiences that youth can't help is depth; true transformation rebut see themselves as kids who quires diving deep. A one-day visit Lesson Plan Explore • Spark event • Do first activities • Practice a skill Design • Construct: Prototype • Discover: Mind Map • Identify: Issues Build • Devise: Mock-up • Examine: Reverse Engineer Share • Report: Exhibit • Wrap-up: Self Assessment Grit: Developing grit is a major goal. Grit is what pushes someone to pursue a goal over a long period of time; it also predicts academic success better than standardized tests. STE(A)M Truck demands grit through challenging students to repeatedly execute, to improve with each iteration. And to do so in a challenging environment: outdoors, hot or cold, rain or shine, standing throughout. Ideas That Drive with a makerspace is like a single bite of an appetizer – more frustrating than filling. We deliver a 20day, on-site experience; a full course meal. Our lesson plan covers four phases of activity: exploration, design, build and share. Below is our “menu” for the STE(A)M Truck program. Please take a moment to sample each course! Stanford Design Thinking: Students are given new tools, methods and processes so they can develop new answers for challenges, big and small. They brainstorm and then build innovative solutions. Report: Students report to the entire school on the processes they followed and the final product that emerged. They set up exhibits that include photographs, and host the event. And on the last day, they wrap up by reflecting and conducting a self assessment. At some point, Jason Martin realized that the dynamic surrounding schools did not embrace change. “Look at a pictures of a classroom from 1910 and today,” says Jason. “They look exactly the same.” Yet, Jason believes that schools can be transformed. And Community Guilds represents almost everything needed for that transformation. Insight came upon reflection: none of Jason’s own transformational experiences happened in a classroom. “I grew up an urban child on welfare,” says Jason, “but I also had the opportunity to work hard and use my hands after moving to a farm. That unique combination instilled grit and a DIY (do-it-yourself) attitude.” Transformative experiences are powerful because they impart selfknowledge. “We want to show kids that they capable of more than they ever imagined,” says Jason. “Give them real problems. Show them how to create solutions. Is there anything more powerful we can teach than solving real problems?” The STE(A)M Truck experience is also designed for efficacy. “Being outside one's comfort zone is where true learning happens,” says Jason, “and few students have experience with a makerspace.” Then there is the notion that teaching never happens, only learning. It recognizes that no matter how much knowledge a teacher has, the only knowledge absorbed is what’s desired. That makes passion essential. “The guild model makes sense because artists and craftspeople are so passionate,” says Jason. “They light fires in so many kids.” Finally, there are expectations. And expectations of disadvantaged students can be quite low. Again, Jason reaches into his past – his first year as a teacher – to illustrate. “I was the rare educator that received an unsatisfactory rating on my first evaluation,” recounts Jason. “My choice was simple: quit or get better.” Jason doubled down, of course, and at the end of his third year, was nominated for Teacher of the Year. “What I learned was that a solid work ethic, perseverance and not settling for the status quo can get you far in life” says Jason. That’s a lesson Jason seeks to spread through Community Guilds by setting high expectations for all children in Atlanta and Georgia. 7 Transforming Students Truck? Check. Curriculum? Check. Students? That was the next challenge. Fortunately, Jason Martin, founder and executive director of Community Guild, found a kindred spirit in Allen Mueller, executive director of innovation for Atlanta Public Schools (APS). Like Jason, both of Allen's parents worked with their hands. So when Allen was introduced to the STE(A)M Truck, he immediately grasped its promise. “…the overwhelming success of the program pilot…” Kindezi Dissemination Report Engagement is a huge issue in schools and Allen understood that hands-on, problem-based learning offered an alternative, especially to unmotivated students. He was confident that the STE(A)M Truck could engage students. The question was: how much? But an even bigger question was long-term feasibility. Can a 20-day program fit within the structure of the regular school day? Will teachers support it? Can children use tools without getting hurt? To get answers, the Kindezi School and KIPP Ways, both APS charter schools, were chosen as pilot sites. Allen chose and funded the pilot at Kindezi. KIPP was chosen because of ties Jason 8 had with KIPP. That pilot was funded by the Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation. And the answers? They were all “yes!” The Kindezi dissemination report, although qualitative in nature, stated that “students were clearly engaged and excited” about the problem they were solving, which was encouraging kids to eat more vegetables. In addition, “there was clear growth in students’ self-reliance and willingness to try something new.” The report continued: “every student learned to hand stitch fabrics, use power and hand tools, take apart and put together electronics, create thinking maps (and) organize problem solving strategies using design thinking.” “…students were clearly engaged and excited…” Kindezi Dissemination Report And students produced a number of physical objects including cedar bento boxes and newfangled chopsticks. Strikingly, students found that the most powerful part of the experience wasn't the tools and technologies themselves, but the fact that “they were encouraged to use them.” Outputs The numbers below are for both the Kindezi and KIPP pilots. Student visitors, SPARK events: 550 Students served, 20-day program: 55 Instructional hours: 280 Student visitors, Share events: 450 Adult visitors, Share events: 150 Student inventions: 70 “…there was clear growth in students’ self-reliance and willingness to try something new.” Kindezi Dissemination Report 9 STE(A)M Truck Gets Graded Every single student from the Kindezi and KIPP pilots was asked the same three questions after the pilots: • • • What did you like most about STE(A)M Truck? How will this experience help you in school and life? Would you do this again? The overwhelming response to the first question was the ability to “use real tools.” Responses to the second question were considerably more varied, from overcoming fears, to learning about teamwork, to doing things again and again, to learning to like the STE(A)M subjects. As for the third question, there was one girl who would never do STE(A)M Truck again; she didn’t like to be outside, or use tools, or get her hands dirty. The rest of her cohort, however, were ready to do it again; the STE(A)M Truck experience was fun, and something they wouldn’t have an opportunity to do otherwise. “One thing STE(A)M Truck taught me is to… know what to improve on, and being able to do that process over and over and over again.” Kindezi 6th grader “We talk about teamwork all the time, but here I actually need my teammates to help me to be successful.” KIPP 8th Grader “I saw kids that I taught in 6th grade that weren't invested and just weren't as interested, out here in love with what they were doing every single day because it was hands-on, it was a realworld focus, and they were actually able to own a lot of the decisions. By the end of it, they definitely took away the lesson we wanted… which was start something and finish strong so that you can actually appreciate the impact of (your efforts)… I think from this they also recognize the main thing we always say – that you are powerful beyond measure.” Year One Accomplishments Completed 4.0 Schools Launch Fellowship July ’13 Conducted apprenticeship pilot July ’13 Unveiled STE(A)M Truck prototype at Atlanta Mini Maker Faire Oct ’13 Raised funds to purchase own truck Nov ’13 Awarded “Making the Future” grant from Cognizant Dec ’13 Awarded contract from Atlanta Public Schools to pilot STE(A)M Truck at Kindezi School Jan ’14 Awarded Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation grant to build out truck, purchase trailer Feb ’14 Awarded Home Depot grant for tools, equipment Mar ’14 Built out STE(A)M Truck 2.0 Mar ’14 Unveiled new STE(A)M Truck at Atlanta Science Festival Mar ’14 Conducted STE(A)M Truck pilots at Kindezi School & KIPP WAYS Awarded Rotary Club grant May ’14 Selected as Google Maker affiliate June ’14 Winner, Atlanta's Most Innovative Venture, Good Frenzy Atlanta June ’14 Finalist, STEM Education Awards ,Technology Association of Georgia June ’14 Claudine Miles, Upper School Dean, KIPP WAYS M o s t I n n o v a t i v e Ve n t u r e 10 Apr–May ’14 Statement of Activities The Road Ahead July 1, 2013 - June 30, 2014 Income Fee for service Grants Donations Total Income $50,000 $68,000 $32,000 $150,000 Expenses Administration Capital Programming Total Expenses Income Less Expenses $20,000 $70,000 $45,000 $135,000 $15,000 Design by Peter Quinn, Caity Taylor, Meghana Melkote and Summer Cao. Community Guilds’ immediate goal is to get the STE(A)M Truck program in as many Metro Atlanta schools as possible. Tech students provided us with many great ideas to improve upon our current design. One of the many ideas is illustrated above. But given the need, the gap and the enormous potential, that’s just getting started. STE(A)M Truck has been designed to scale, and our medium-term goal is to increase access statewide by providing a STE(A)M Truck for every regional education service agency (RESA) in Georgia, 16 in all, by 2017. Beyond that, our vision is a mobile makerspace for every school district with at least 10 elementary and middle schools… in all 50 states. But even a nation full of STE(A)M Trucks is just part of the ultimate solution, which is to transform how schools teach. Our biggest goal is the broad adoption of new pedagogical approaches. “I'd like to be the Johnny Appleseed of STEM education,” says Jason Martin, founder and executive director of Community Guilds. “In order to make a big impact, we have to inspire change in schools.” And we have, in fact, started designing STE(A)M Truck 2.0. Recently, three teams of Georgia 12 And it appears that Community Guilds is on its way. The Kindezi organization, of which the Kindezi School is its first institution, had been planning a STEM-focused second school prior to encountering STE(A)M Truck. Our pilot with Kindezi School has influenced its thinking around how to organize studio time. "What impressed us about the pilot was the way the kids really engaged in the STE(A)M Truck projects" said Gilberte Pascal, principal of the new Kindezi school that's slated to open in fall 2015. "Our students attacked each project with purposeful excitement and this is the kind of focus we want to duplicate at our new school. What we are learning from STE(A)M Truck is how to teach the creative thinking behind the science; we have to be as engaging as the STE(A)M Truck." 13 With Profound Gratitude A nonprofit gets started with a mere idea, boundless energy and more than a dollop of optimism. But like all ventures, nothing happens without sufficient funding. Agil Agil Bob Goodman Ginger O'Leary And understandably, year one can be severely nerve-racking. Beyond gratitude, we are humbled by the outpouring of support we’ve enjoyed in this, our inaugural year, from major Atlanta philanthropic organizations, to friends, family members and neighbors. Anonymous Adam Green David Ornstein Chris Appleton Kawal Grover Jessica Page Poggioli Kate Avebe Gordon Hall Peter Pages Claire Baralt Steven & Joelle Hankin Jill Patton Damodaram Bashyam Burt & Lo Hoffner Edward Petrou Kevin Byers Jenny Hoffner Jeffrey Petrou Patricia Campbell Sam Hoffner Melissa K. Place Matt Candler Bella Hoffner-Martin Samuel Rauschenberg Susan Carstensen Nancy M. Horn Kay Reed Carolyn Catanese David Jacobs Joseph Reynolds Lisa Clarke & Meredith Marchbank David Jernigan Jody Richards Charlotte Kaiser Joan Sanford Justin Cohen Kevin Kelly Stephanie Schrag James Conneran Joshua Kol Jason Schwartz Gwen Davies Vesna Krnjetin Sachin Sharma Bill & Sheila Davis Maila Krnjetin Catherine Shiel Bettina Dennis Paul Marquardt Bernard Shuster William Reed Dyer Gregory & Ann Martin Bert Skellie George Flanagan Jason Martin Deborah Slowata Joy Fowler Atiba Mbiwan Emily Spector Ariela Freedman Kate McGregor Mosley Brenda Stines Michael Galchinsky Kristen Mielhe George & Wendy Thomas Ann Gardner Juan Mora Marc Waxman Tate Garrett Vijai Narayanan Gerald Willis Not one of us achieves alone. At Community Guilds, we feel this truth in our bones every day. A large organization with a healthy balance sheet might not feel a chill wind, but we literally would not be here today if it weren't for you, our donors and supporters. “Thank you” is never enough, but we are hopeful that the difference we make – together – is all the thanks we really need. For our children, our schools, our state, and a future in which STE(A)M education in America is unparalled and accessible to all, may we build upon our triumphs in year two. Thank you for being with us from the very beginning. Institutional Donors 14 Individual Donors Board of Directors, FY 2013-14 Board of Advisors, FY 2013-14 William Reed Dyer, President Senior Associate, Great Schools Partnership Cape Elizabeth, ME Dr. Folami Prescott Adams Director of Leadership, KIPP Metro Atlanta Kevin Byers, Treasurer Principal, Parkside Associates, LLC Atlanta, GA Jonathan Grunberg, Secretary Associate, Wood, Hernacki & Evans, LLC Atlanta, GA Jeffrey Petrou Owner, Jump Solutions Durham, NC Sam Hoffner VP of Operations, Wholesale Carrier Services, Inc. Parkland, FL Maria Ebrahimiji Journalist, CNN; Co-founder “I Speak for Myself” Atlanta Matt Candler Founder/CEO, 4.0 Schools New Orleans Dr. Ariela Freedman Owner and Founder, MavenTree Consulting; Adjunct Assistant Professor, Emory Atlanta Adam Green Founder/Executive Director, Rocking the Boat New York City David Jernigan Deputy Superintendent, Atlanta Public Schools Shane Mathews Advisor ATDC, Founder My Inventor Club Atlanta Atiba Mbiwan Associate Director, Zeist Foundation, Atlanta Community Guilds 501 Dancing Fox Road Atlanta, GA 30032 [email protected] community-guilds.org Please consider supporting us with a gift of time, treasure, or in-kind contribution. Contact Jason at [email protected] to discuss options.