Finalist
Early Childhood Development

Wildflower Schools

Team Leader
Lindsay Hyde
Solution overview
Our Solution
Wildflower Schools
Tagline
Exceptional teacher-entrepreneurs creating Montessori microschools to meet the needs of their community.
Pitch us on your solution

Problem: We are facing an early childhood workforce crisis: lacking access to living wages, early childhood educators are leaving. As a result, a supply-demand mismatch has emerged. This lack of available supply is driving up the cost of available early childhood education and making it inaccessible to low and moderate income families.  

Wildflower has designed a scaleable platform to empower teacher-entrepreneurs to launch and lead microschools, creating more access to early childhood education. Educators join as teacher-entrepreneurs. They spend 10 months in an accelerator cohort. Schools are launched with access in mind: ~33% of students pay in full, ~33% pay half, and ~33% pay nothing. Wildflower has built a technology infrastructure that enables teachers to conduct school management and student assessment work themselves. By empowering teachers with management of their schools, they report higher job satisfaction and are able to be paid a sustainable wage, retaining them in the field.

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What is the problem you are solving?

The majority of education investment begins at age 5, despite clear evidence that the most rapid brain development occurs in the first few years of life. As a result, children are lacking access to quality early childhood education.

In the US, 51% of people live in a child care desert, in which there are 3x as many children as there are licensed childcare spots. The impact of quality early childhood education are well documented: it off-sets the sustained toxic stress associated with living in poverty, builds essential cognitive and social emotional skills, and enhances school readiness. Additionally, family impacts are significant: access to consistent, quality childcare enables parents to maintain job stability and overall economic security.

While the need for quality early childhood education continues to grow, the shortage of early childhood educators is at crisis level. Marcy Whitebook of the UC-Berkeley Center for the Study of Child Care Employment, noted: “Child care workers in the US make less than parking lot attendants and dog-walkers. The economics of early childhood in the United States are quite broken.”

Without a change in the system, the gap between the need for early childhood education and accessibility will continue to widen. 

Who are you serving?

Wildflower focuses on three constituencies: 

Students & families: Wildflower has synthesized what the research demonstrates about early childhood learning and development into a model to deliver these best practices. Wildflower schools leverage child-centered Montessori practices, empowered teachers-entrepreneurs, small microschools, neighborhood integration, intentional diversity, beautiful environments, and data-driven instruction. Schools are organized in three year age cohorts: birth to 2.9 years (infant/toddler) and 2.9 -6 years (primary).  Quality early childhood education is made available to middle income families at 25-50% less than comparable private schools, and to low-income families utilizing existing child-care subsidies.

Early Childhood Educators: Exceptional early childhood educators are provided with the opportunity to launch and lead their own school. As a result, they are freed of the bureaucratic burden that many teachers cite as being a source of burnout; they are supported on a career track that encourages professional growth; and they are able to earn a sustainable wage without leaving the classroom. 

Communities: Wildflower Schools are built by and for local communities, under the leadership of local teacher-entrepreneurs. Nested in neighborhoods, the schools aligned with many community redevelopment priorities: urban renewal, livable and walkable communities, and voluntary integration.

What is your solution?

Wildflower Schools has built a strong technological infrastructure and operating model to empower early childhood educators to become teacher-entrepreneurs in their communities and create access to early childhood education opportunities. 

Exceptional teachers are recruited to Wildflower in the summer. They spend the next 10-12 months in a teacher-entrepreneur accelerator program, ending with the launch of a microschool serving ~24 students in their community. Each teacher-entrepreneur builds an advisory board composed of parents, community members, and other educators. 

During the accelerator program, teacher-entrepreneurs work closely with Wildflower Operations coaches to gain access to direct education and scaffolding on topics that may be unfamiliar, such as: financial modeling, reach estate, family recruitment and school licensing. 

As a result of being intentionally led by teacher entrepreneurs and an advisory board of families, each Wildflower school is unique, but share common elements:

Montessori Methodology: Wildflower schools are built on the strong foundation of Montessori’s observations about childhood development. A substantial body of research demonstrates authentic Montessori to be one of the very few educational models that makes a lasting impact on young children in ways that matter over the long term. A 2003 meta-analysis of 29 school models found Montessori to be among the top five in terms of student outcomes (Borman 2003). More recently, the largest study yet conducted of authentic Montessori practice in a high-needs public school setting found that Montessori education greatly reduced the achievement hap across the preschool years (Lillard 2017). 

Rigorous Assessment: One particular area of innovation is Wildflower’s development of new technology to support teacher observation by embedding sensors in the Montessori environment to track the choices the children make about what to work on, their level of concentration, and their progress over time. Because Montessori methods rely on superhuman observational powers of the teacher to observe and record data, we see these technologies as the key to a new type of synthesis of data-driven and child-centered educational strategies. 

Administrative technology stack: We provide all teachers with utilities that significantly reduce administrative burdens, such as admissions and finance, allowing teachers to handle school management tasks that usually require additional staff.

Select only the most relevant.
  • Enable parents and caregivers to support their children’s overall development
  • Prepare children for primary school through exploration and early literacy skills
Where is your solution team headquartered?
Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
Our solution's stage of development:
  • Growth
More about your solution
About your team
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Solution Team:
Lindsay Hyde
Lindsay Hyde
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