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Eager to demonstrate that your education solution has a positive impact on learners?

2024 LEAP Challenge

Closed

Submissions are closed

Timeline

  • Applications Open

    February 15, 2023 10:00am EST
  • Solution Deadline

    May 1, 2024 12:00pm EDT
  • Applications Under Review

    May 21, 2024 5:00pm EDT
  • Finalists Selected

    June 14, 2024 10:00am EDT
  • Winners Selected

    July 31, 2024 10:00am EDT
  • Virtual LEAPathon! Project Hosts are matched to Fellows.

    September 3, 2024 10:00am EDT
  • First wave of 12-week LEAP Projects take place.

    September 16, 2024 10:00am EDT
  • Wave 1 Culmination Event

    December 10, 2024 10:00am EST
  • Second wave of 12-week LEAP Projects take place.

    January 27, 2025 10:00am EST
  • Wave 2 Culmination Event

    April 24, 2025 10:00pm EDT

Challenge Overview

Eager to demonstrate that your education solution has a positive impact on learners? 

Apply for support from expert researchers and social entrepreneurs who will help build your approach to generating and using evidence to improve your product or program and strengthen children’s learning outcomes.

For the 2024 LEAP Challenge, we welcome applications from education organizations that meet the following criteria:

  • A solution (program or product) that improves learning outcomes for children ages 2-12 in Sub-Saharan Africa or Latin America. 

  • A solution (program or product) that is in the pilot or growth stage of development:

    • Pilot: The solution has been launched in at least one community, but is still iterating on design or business model. If for-profit, is generally working to gain traction and may have completed a fundraising round with investment capital. (Often 10+ users/direct beneficiaries)

    • Growth: An established solution available in one or more communities with a consistent design and approach, ready for further growth in multiple communities or countries. If for-profit, has generally completed at least one formal investment round (Seed stage or later). If nonprofit, has an established set of donors and/or revenue streams.

Organizations selected as Project Hosts will attend a two-day virtual LEAPathon event where they meet LEAP researcher and social entrepreneur Fellows, engage in project refinement sessions, and match with up to four LEAP Fellows. Project Hosts will partner with Fellows on a 12-week Project Sprint which will kick off in two waves – five sprints will begin in September 2024 and another five will begin in January 2025. 

Benefits of hosting a LEAP project include: 

  • Access to a global pool of research and social entrepreneur Fellows who apply their knowledge and skills to support your education solution’s evidence journey;

  • A final report that details tailor-made research recommendations (study designs, strategies, frameworks, and/or monitoring and evaluation tools) that inform your approach to strengthen the evidence base of your education solution;

  • Professionally-managed project facilitation provided by MIT Solve, allowing you to focus solely on the most critical elements of the 12-week project;

  • Valuable networking opportunities across the global cohort of LEAP Fellows and Project Hosts;

  • A $5,000 stipend to the Project Host organization to compensate for time spent hosting the LEAP Project.

If you’re interested in being a Project Host and would like to learn more, please view the Eligibility & FAQ or fill out this form:

Eligibility Requirements & FAQ

Application Clinic Slides

What is LEAP?

MIT Solve and the Jacobs Foundation have a shared goal of supporting and accelerating education solutions that positively impact learners. In 2022 we launched LEAP (Leveraging Evidence for Action to Promote change) to provide education organizations with expertise to strengthen the evidence base of their education solutions. 

LEAP pairs education organizations (Project Hosts) with a team of researchers and social entrepreneurs (LEAP Fellows) who lend their best-in-class expertise to the organization for a 12-week sprint (a “LEAP Project”). Fellows provide tailor-made research recommendations that inform the organization’s approach to strengthen the evidence base of their product or program.

What happens if my organization is selected? 

Organizations selected as Project Hosts will attend a two-day virtual LEAPathon event where they meet LEAP researcher and social entrepreneur Fellows, engage in project refinement sessions, and match with up to four LEAP Fellows. Project Hosts will partner with Fellows on a 12-week Project Sprint which will kick off in two waves – five sprints will begin in September 2024 and another five will begin in January 2025. 

What are the benefits of hosting a LEAP Project?

The goal of hosting a LEAP Project is to help your organization continue to build a culture of evidence, demonstrate the effectiveness of your solution, and accelerate the solution’s impact on learners by embedding insights and results from research. Project Hosts receive the following benefits:

  • Access to a global pool of research and social entrepreneur Fellows who apply their knowledge and skills to support your education solution’s evidence journey;

  • A final report that details tailor-made research recommendations (study designs, strategies, frameworks, and/or monitoring and evaluation tools) that inform your approach to strengthen the evidence base of your education solution;

  • Professionally-managed project facilitation provided by MIT Solve, allowing you to focus solely on the most critical elements of the 12-week project;

  • Valuable networking opportunities across the global cohort of LEAP Fellows and Project Hosts;

  • A $5,000 stipend to the Project Host organization to compensate for time spent hosting the LEAP Project.

Who can apply to host a LEAP Project? 

  • Project Hosts are education organizations (non-profit, for-profit, or hybrid models.) 
  • Project Hosts have education solutions (a product or program) that aim to improve learning outcomes for children ages 2-12 in Sub-Saharan Africa or Latin America.
    • Sub-Saharan Africa is inclusive of the countries listed here.
    • Latin America is inclusive of the countries listed here.
  • Project Hosts’ solutions are in the pilot or growth stage of development.
    • Pilot: The solution has been launched in at least one community, but is still iterating on design or business model. If for-profit, is generally working to gain traction and may have completed a fundraising round with investment capital. (Often 10+ users/direct beneficiaries)
    • Growth: An established solution available in one or more communities with a consistent design and approach, ready for further growth in multiple communities or countries. If for-profit, has generally completed at least one formal investment round (Seed stage or later). If nonprofit, has an established set of donors and/or revenue streams

How will my application be evaluated?

Please note: applications must be submitted in English.

The judging panel will include leaders and experts from the education research, academia, entrepreneurship, and philanthropic ecosystems. After an initial screening by Solve and Jacobs Foundation staff and a community of reviewers, the judges will score the screened applications and select finalists, who will be invited to record their project pitch and attend a virtual Interview Day and Q&A session with the judging panel. 

Reviewers and the judging panel will score applications according to the following criteria:

  • Alignment: The applicant is an education organization with a product or program (solution) that provides quality learning opportunities and improves learning outcomes for children ages 2-12.

  • Partnership Readiness: The application demonstrates that the organization has a supportive infrastructure and a dedicated Team Lead who has the authority, capacity, and qualities to partner and engage collaboratively with a Fellow Team on a research-intensive LEAP Project.

  • Evidence Understanding: The application has a promising or sound Theory of Change or logic model that describes what the solution does and why it matters coherently and convincingly. The application outlines a clear understanding of the solution’s current evidence base and the need to strengthen it.

  • Research Aims: The research questions seek to establish and/or strengthen the evidence base of the solution and advance children’s learning outcomes. The research questions are logical based on the organization’s needs. The outputs appropriately link to the research questions. 

  • Project Feasibility: The application proposes a LEAP Project with outputs that are manageable for a Fellow team (3-4 part-time LEAP Fellows working 6-10 hours a week) to accomplish within a 12-week sprint period.

  • Potential for Impact: There is a realistic, practical plan for what the organization will do with the outputs once the LEAP Project concludes. The application proposes a LEAP Project that has the potential to be transformative for the organization’s solution and the population it serves.

What is the LEAP Timeline for project hosts?

  • March 5, 2024: LEAP Challenge launches! Call for applications is open.

  • April 30, 2024: Call for applications closes at 12pm (noon) EST.

  • May 2 to August 2, 2024: Applications reviewed and winners selected.

    • June 24-28: Finalists notified

    • June 29 & 30: Finalist Interview Days with the Judging Panel

    • August 2: Winners notified.

  • September 3 & 6, 2024 : Virtual LEAPathon! Project Hosts are matched to Fellows.

  • September 16 - December 6, 2024: First wave of 12-week LEAP Projects take place.

  • December 17, 2024: Wave 1 Culmination Event

  • January 27 - April 18, 2025: Second wave of 12-week LEAP Projects take place. 

  • April 29, 2025: Wave 2 Culmination Event

Can I submit more than one project idea from my organization?

We want your best LEAP Project idea! Therefore, only one application per organization will be accepted.

What does LEAP support look like in practice? 

Please note: The 12-week sprint is conducted in English and the final report is written in English.

  • Time: 
    • Fellows dedicate ~6-10 hours per week to your LEAP Project. 
    • Project Hosts, particularly the Team Lead, commit ~3-4 hours per week to the LEAP Project.
  • Phases of work: The 12-week Project sprint is organized into three ~4-week phases: 
    1. Learning: During this phase, Project Hosts share crucial information and data that enables the Fellows to immerse themselves in your solution and your goals for the LEAP project. 
    2. Drafting & Iterating: Once Fellows scope a feasible project and align with the Project Host on proposed deliverables, they begin designing research recommendations, working collaboratively with the Project Host to include your thoughtful insights and feedback. 
    3. Editing/Finalizing Deliverables: Fellows produce a final report with research recommendations, (study designs, strategies, frameworks, and/or monitoring and evaluation tools) that will inform your organization’s approach to strengthen the evidence base of your solution.
  • Project Outputs:
    • Visit the Project Showcase from the 2022 & 2023 LEAP Challenges to learn more about what has been accomplished.
    • Example of outputs from from previous projects include:
      • A template to conduct an RCT to assess the impacts of an out-of-school program on children’s functional literacy and numeracy.
      • A quasi-experimental study design and data collection plan to enable an organization to understand the impact of its school leadership program on student outcomes. 
      • A theoretical framework of the science of reading applied to a mobile application that teaches reading fluency and a companion teacher’s guide to link the theory to the application.  
      • A research-informed implementation roadmap to increase fidelity to prescribed literacy teaching practices in community schools. 
      • A series of survey instruments to test the knowledge of professional development coordinators who participate in an in-school teacher trainer program. 

Judging Criteria

  • Partnership Readiness: The application demonstrates that the organization has a supportive infrastructure and a dedicated Team Lead who has the authority, capacity, and qualities to partner and engage collaboratively with a Fellow Team on a research-intensive LEAP Project.
  • Evidence Understanding: The application has a promising or sound Theory of Change or logic model that describes what the solution does and why it matters coherently and convincingly. The application outlines a clear understanding of the solution’s current evidence base and the n
  • Research Aims: The research questions seek to establish and/or strengthen the evidence base of the solution and advance children’s learning outcomes. The research questions are logical based on the organization’s needs. The outputs appropriately link to the research que
  • Project Feasibility: The application proposes a LEAP Project with outputs that are manageable for a Fellow team (3-4 part-time LEAP Fellows working 6-10 hours a week) to accomplish within a 12-week sprint period.
  • Potential for Impact: The application outlines a realistic, practical plan for what the organization will do with the outputs once the LEAP Project concludes. The application proposes a LEAP Project that has the potential to be transformative for the organization’s solution an

Project Outcomes

  • Street Child UK

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  • Education for Sharing

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  • Seriti Institute

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  • Practical Education Network

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  • School-to-School

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Solutions

Selected

Inspiring Teachers

By Shivam Rawal
Shivam Rawal Simon Graffy
Selected

Fundación Aprender a Quererte

By Mariana Crane
Mariana Crane Juan Pablo Aristizábal
Selected

CEPE Di Tella

By Carolina Gattei
Carolina Gattei Cecilia  Calero Analí Rosa Taboh Agustin Gravano
Selected

ARUKAY

By Vicky Ricaurte
Vicky  Ricaurte
Selected

School-to-School International

By Mark Lynd
Mark Lynd
Selected

Koloso

By James Blewett
James  Blewett Petra Chikasa Siphiwe Sowi Munsaka
Selected

Seriti Institute

By Struan Robertson
Struan Robertson
Selected

Education for Sharing

By Bailey Prasad
Bailey Prasad
Selected

Street Child UK

By Samyukta Lakshman
Samyukta  Lakshman
Selected

Practical Education Network

By Heather Beem
Heather Beem
Finalist

Afro Technologies Limited

By Simon Aseno
Simon Aseno Berlinda Asiedu Ayebilla Avoka Warihana  Gumah
Finalist

TONGO Inspire Teaching

By Tongo Método
Tongo Método
Finalist

Citizen Leader Lab

By Norma Kok
Norma Kok
Finalist

Mindcraft Coaching Foundation

By Johnson Ajayi
Johnson Ajayi
Finalist

Woord en Daad

By Maria den Hollander
Maria den Hollander

Judge

Elisa Mansur

Elisa Mansur

VélezReyes+, Principal
Joel Ogunsola

Joel Ogunsola

Tech4Dev, Founder & President
Renaud Comba

Renaud Comba

UNICEF Innocenti, Education Specialist
Simon Sommer

Simon Sommer

Jacobs Foundation, Co-CEO
Diana M. Suarez

Diana M. Suarez

GLOT Inc, Founder & Strategic Advisor
Christopher Geary

Christopher Geary

BSD Education, CEO & Co-Founder
Diego Adame

Diego Adame

LEGO Foundation, Sr. Director, Programs
Alejandro Villanueva

Alejandro Villanueva

Televisa Foundation, Executive Director
Oluwakemi Olurinola

Oluwakemi Olurinola

Exquitec Education Technology, CEO, Lead Consultant
Lea Simpson

Lea Simpson

EdTech Hub, Director
Drew Edwards

Drew Edwards

Pangea Educational Development, Co-Founder, Board Director
Kim Foulds

Kim Foulds

Sesame Workshop, Vice President, Content Research & Evaluation
Pauline Essah

Pauline Essah

Education Sub Saharan Africa (ESSA), Director of Research and Programmes
Stephen Senyo Tettegah

Stephen Senyo Tettegah

Luminos Fund, Ghana Country Manager
Anna Penido

Anna Penido

Centro Lemann de Sobral, Executive Director
Beatriz Guillen

Beatriz Guillen

The Resource Foundation, Executive Director
Maria Monge

Maria Monge

J-PAL LAC, Sr. Policy and Communications Manager
Victor Volman

Victor Volman

Argentinos por la Educación, Director of the Observatory
Emilio Lopez

Emilio Lopez

Tinker Foundation, Education Program Officer
Bruna Pecin

Bruna Pecin

Lemann Center, Executive Coordinator