About 10 months ago, with
the support of Beulah McLoyd, the amazing Principal of the newly-reborn Walter
H. Dyett High School for the Arts, a group of Chicagoland entrepreneurs and the
team from 1871, along with some other talented individuals and organizations,
set out to see if we could help make an impact and a difference in our
community and in our city beyond the 4 walls of 1871.
We wanted to see if the
excitement of entrepreneurship which we’ve all felt could be taught and shared
with a group of 9th grade high school students and whether it would
help them, not simply in this new course of instruction, but far beyond it as
well – in their other classes – in their overall enthusiasm and interest in
learning – and even entirely beyond their school activities.
We wrote a book, we raised
some funds personally to design and construct a new digital active learning
classroom, and we taught the initial course for several months to the first 20
students. And we asked the school to help track “our” Eagle Entrepreneurship
students and see whether there were any demonstrable changes.
We have just started this
year’s class with another 20 students (some of last year’s students helped us
kick off the new class as well) and we have just been supplied with the
tracking results for the initial cohort which appear below:
This is just the
beginning, but it’s an important first step. And it shows what a small group of
interested and committed individuals can accomplish when their heads and hearts
are in the right place.
I want to take this
opportunity to thank everyone who helped make this modest dream a reality in
just a few months. It was a great team effort and one which continues to this
day. So thanks to: Beulah McLoyd and her team at Dyett, to our generous
entrepreneur donors including especially the Skender Foundation, to Barbara
Pollack and Ken Brown and the folks at Steelcase, Forward Space and Interface
who made the new classroom come to life, and to my team at 1871 who pitched in
to help with the classes, the materials, and the logistics. H.A.T.