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| Augusta Good News

Augusta GA News Report Showcases SOAR Academy’s Yass Prize Journey

By Charmain Z. Brackett |
  • December 21, 2022

Grant Will Allow Academy To SOAR

An Evans’ microschool is on its way to reaching more students thanks to a $500,000 award.

SOAR Academy, currently housed at In Focus Church in Evans, was a finalist for the $1 million YASS Prize,which was awarded Dec. 14 in New York City.

“I am so happy for my kids,” said Kenisha Skaggs, who founded SOAR Academy 12 years ago.

A microschool is an independent learning center. Skaggs calls the private academy a “one room schoolhouse” with a family feel.

Eight teachers work with students who range from elementary to high school; some students have learning disabilities while others have just not kept up academically; some are autistic; and some are homeschooled students who use the program to augment their curriculum.

Sixty students are enrolled; half attend in person while the other half are online. And she has a long waiting list of students she hopes will soon be able to receive needed services. She anticipates a possible student body of 150.

At SOAR, they offer individualized learning opportunities. Central to the mission is literacy.

“There’s a huge gap in kids not reading,” she said. “We have to get kids reading.”

And if kids can’t read, they can’t hold a job or function in society, she added.

The Augusta University graduate started her program after working in a commercial learning center for several years. She was discouraged by the tenets of No Child Left Behind. She also witnessed how a standardized approach to education doesn’t work for all students through her own sister who is neurodivergent.

Experts evaluated Skaggs’ sister and gave her parents little hope that she could receive higher education and perform more than a menial job. Her parents didn’t listen and took her education into their hands. Today, she works for the federal government in a high level IT/HR position, Skaggs said.

Many neurodivergent students have computer and science capabilities, but they just don’t learn the same way, she said.

After leaving the commercial tutoring center, Skaggs started tutoring students in the attic of her house. SOAR then moved to an office complex for several years before moving to the dedicated space at In Focus, and with the $500,000, the school will move into its own space to help more children.

She and husband, Lucas, who serves as the academy’s co-director, have looked at several possibilities in both Richmond and Columbia counties and hope to have a site scoped out during the next school semester. They also want to expand into South Carolina to assist students in Aiken and North Augusta.

MORE: Augusta University Literacy Center forms partnership with Augusta Tech

Seeing the need for expansion of services, they applied for, and the school received a $10,000 VELA grant for non-traditional learning about a year ago. That prompted them to look for more grants, she said.

Receiving the YASS Prize was a rigorous process with several rounds of elimination. Skaggs said in addition to the funding, they’ve received mentoring from top leaders and have formed partnerships with other non-traditional schools. The networking piece has been an invaluable part of the process, she said, as they’ve gained more tools to help their own students.

Philanthropists Janine and Jeff Yass developed the YASS prize in response to COVID. They’d originally supplied funds for computers for Philadelphia schoolchildren to use during the pandemic, but they were disheartened that “technology was being substituted for learning,” Janine Yass wrote in an article for Forbes Magazine.

They decided they needed to do more for education.

The goal of the YASS Prize is to support “class education providers who can tackle the big education challenges of the day and deliver an education for students that is sustainable, transformational, outstanding and permissionless. It’s more than an awards program or a philanthropic endeavor. It’s a movement intended to transform education for everyone,” according to the YASS Prize website.

“In 2022, the Yass Foundation for Education awarded more than $20 million in grants to new and alumni organizations, including the prestigious $1 million Yass Prize to transform education, given to the group that most exemplifies the STOP principles.”

Skaggs said she’s excited for what the future holds for SOAR and her students.

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The Yass Foundation advances the four core STOP principles: Sustainable, Transformational, Outstanding, and Permissionless education. Each year, the Foundation will reward dozens of organizations, building a growing network of innovative providers that
demonstrate these qualities in their commitment to new ideas, technologies, and approaches to learning that bring education into
the 21st century. The Foundation is powered by the Center for Education Reform (CER) in partnership with Forbes.

We used the Yass Prize to launch a program called Skypod catalyst, which is essentially an accelerator to help other people start microschools.

We believe very much that microschools should be bottoms up, they come from the community. They're founded by educators who know their community really well. And they want to design a learning environment for the kids in that community.

Amar Kumar
Founder and CEO,
KaiPod Learning, 2022 Yass Prize Seminfinalist

Education is one of the most fundamental pillars for democratizing opportunities for success that we have in our society.

It’s thanks to organizations like the Yass Prize that our children are going to have a better tomorrow.

Francis X. Suarez
Mayor,
City of Miami

Having the status of Yass Prize Semifinalist has opened doors that we’ve been knocking on for years,

including public recognition from our Governor and partnership conversations with other education innovators from around the country.

Matthew Chaussee
Founder & CEO,
CareerViewXR & BeMoreColorful

Being a part of the [Yass] family confirmed that what I'm doing is right,

going against the common core and focusing on what we know is important for kids really works, and having a network of people now that also agree was super huge.

Kenisha Skaggs
Founder,
SOAR Academy

Being a part of this experience has amplified the access we can give to our students in a way that nothing has, and the access is just critical.

The Yass Prize is almost like Burning Man for education reform.

Cris Gulacy-Worrel
Vice President,
Oakmont Education, 2022 Yass Prize Finalist

The Yass Award is about celebrating and rewarding those who make students the priority.”

Kevin Stitt
Governor,
Oklahoma

Everyone knows that without great education, our nation suffers.

Great education is a vital link for students to become successful citizens.

Janine Yass
Founder,
The Yass Prize

The Yass Prize has brought together such diverse leaders

from all different demographics, all different states, all different service provider types that you can learn from.

Taylor Shead
Founder and CEO,
STEMuli Studios

When we follow the money, it’s ludicrous how this country is getting away with funding education.

The funding is not following children. We're trying to make better options for kids, for poor kids, middle class kids. Wealthy people have this choice, they opt out of their systems easily, why shouldn't all children have that choice?

Janine Yass
Founder,
The Yass Prize

In a state where alternative education is often overlooked, the Yass community helps us shine.

The Yass Prize has empowered our youth, families and community by bringing great visibility to our efforts.

Dr. LeDonna Griffin
Founder & Executive Director,
Leaders to Legends

The Yass Prize is centered around ensuring that this [program] provides you a stepping stone...

We don’t want you to rinse, wash, repeat. We want you to build and sustain.

Jeanne Allen
Founder & CEO, Center for Education Reform ,
Director, Yass Foundation for Education

Because of the Yass Prize, we were able to add an additional pre-K classroom.

Portia Green
Principal,
Prichard Prep, 2022 Yass Prize Semifinalist

Believe in your mission… Ground yourself… Never give up…

Sal Khan
Founder,
Khan Academy

Being a part of the [Yass] family confirmed that what I'm doing is right,

focusing on what we know is important for kids really works, and having a network of people now that also agree was super huge.

Kenisha Scaggs
Founder,
SOAR Academy

Yass brought us together, creating opportunities to create an educational universe within which we can look at education differently…

we have to find academic experiences that represent neuro-divergent learners, kids who want to learn about gaming, who want to do stuff online, who dropped out of school.

Dr. Steve Perry
Head of Schools,
Capital Preparatory Schools

It might be the first time you’re speaking where everyone is actually listening and cares about what you’re doing.

I don’t think I’ve been in a room as supportive as the Yass Prize Semifinalist room in Miami.

Brian Curcio
Founder and CEO,
Rapunzl, 2022 Yass Prize Finalist

There is absolutely zero downside to being a part of this network by submitting your application and what you will encounter is unlike any other grant.

It's actually mind blowing. I really see myself as an education entrepreneur, but this expanded me.

Diana Diaz-Harrison
Founder,
Arizona Autism Charter Schools

The Yass Prize has significantly impacted the trajectory of our organization.

When we originally applied, we simply provided supplemental support services to homeschooling families. Now, we are growing into an education network that provides community, coaching, and curriculum nationwide.

Brenaea Fairchild
Executive Director,
Melanin Village

The foundation of any society is a good education.

Jeff Yass
Founder,
The Yass Prize

If you're committed to wanting to be one of the change makers of the future in education, I believe that this is a place for you.

Not only because of the capital, but because of the knowledge that comes by communing with the diverse group of people as opposed to everybody that thinks the exact same way that you might think.

Taylor Shead
Founder and CEO,
STEMuli Studios

The Yass Prize process has created an awareness of the education freedom movement within churches and communities.

It's given us an opportunity to start critical discussions with our congregations, parents, community leaders and members, about the laws that govern education in Pennsylvania.

Pastor Joshua Robertson
Founder & Executive Director,
Black Pastors United for Education

We have a tremendously transformative model that could stand for a little disruption.

The Yass experience has given us “permission” to do exactly that.

Kelby Woodard
President & CEO,
Cristo Rey Network

Our newest endeavor – that was part of our Yass Prize initiative – we're bringing career and technical education into the school

I'm in the process of going through the construction of a 20,000 square foot $11.5 million dollar building dedicated to career and technical education for the students in the Philadelphia region.

Brian Patrick King
President,
Father Judge High School, 2022 Yass Prize Semifinalist

I’m dreaming bigger, bolder, and more bodacious [because of the Yass Prize].

It has helped me raise the ceiling on what’s possible.

Keith Brooks
Founder/CEO,
National Fellowship for Black and Latino Male Educators (NFBLME)

The Yass Prize is truly changing the landscape of education options across the nation,

and I couldn't be more grateful for what it's done for us, and helping us serve more students and families.

Diana Diaz-Harrison
Founder,
Arizona Autism Charter Schools

One of the missions of the Yass Prize and the Yass Prize movement is really surfacing best practices in innovation—

in innovators who are doing this type of transformational work, so that others can learn from it and replicate it, so that you can actually grow yourselves.

Jeff Imrich
Co-Founder,
Rock by Rock

I'm a Yass Prize finalist from last year.

And through that, we were able to open up our second campus in the city of Wichita.

Wade Moore
Founder & Dean,
Urban Preparatory Academy

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