Elevate K-12 Lands $40 Million to Solve the Teacher Shortage with a New Way to Teach

Teachers are a vital resource for teaching the next generation, which makes a potential teacher shortage frightening. However, Elevate K-12 has stepped in to alleviate the burden on schools with its new way to teach children, which relies on real-time lessons streamed in classrooms. The company provides excellent teachers and supporting technology to make the entire education experience effective and engaging. To learn more about Elevate K-12 and its goal, check out the press release below.

CHICAGO, June 16, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — Elevate K-12, the leading provider of high-quality live-streaming instruction for US K-12 classrooms, has closed a Series C $40M round of funding led by venture capital firm General Catalyst. The funding will support Elevate K-12 in its mission to solve the ongoing teacher-shortage crisis by scaling its live stream instruction model to more schools and districts that lack teachers in critical content areas due to zip code barriers. The funding will allow Elevate K-12 to invest in product and delivery to enhance school and classroom teaching experiences.

“We have already seen just how effective our live teaching is in classrooms, but there is so much more we can do to enhance the experience of students, schools and our live teachers,” said Shaily Baranwal, Elevate K-12’s Founder-CEO. “We have proven that live-streamed teaching works when done right, and we will continue to build on that. By investing in our product, service, engineering and staff, this new round of funding will allow us to make our service even more powerful as we continue to assist schools to address their teacher shortages.”

The new funding arrives at a crucial time for both Elevate K-12 and the country’s schooling system at large, which Baranwal says is ripe for productive innovation. Schools across the country have been struggling for years to fill vacant positions and shrink class sizes that have ballooned as a result of the teacher shortage, but the crisis has only gotten worse. A survey conducted by the National Education Association revealed that 55% of teachers say they now plan to exit the profession earlier than they planned when starting their careers. And according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, there are 567,000 fewer educators in public schools than before the pandemic.

General Catalyst’s managing partner, Hemant Taneja said the firm became interested in partnering with Elevate K-12 after seeing the success of the technology company’s platform in its initial partner districts across 27 states.

“Shaily Baranwal and the Elevate K-12 team have built a solution that works for all stakeholders. Students need to master new skills and subject matters. Districts need access to more quality, affordable teachers. Teachers crave more mobility and flexibility. Elevate K-12 enables all three and we think what they are building will be transformational,” said Hemant Taneja, managing partner at General Catalyst. “We are excited to join in the mission to make high-quality instruction available to all students, no matter where they live, bringing equality to education.”

General Catalyst Executive in Residence, Lexi Reese, will join Elevate’s board, and shared, “Elevate K-12 is providing seamless live-stream instruction with great teachers for schools plagued by the worsening teacher shortage. In doing so, they’re making it possible for every child to be able to receive a high-quality education regardless of zip code. That is a right that is not being afforded to too many children today and, without education, these kids and families are set back long after school ends.”

“Almost every professional landscape is evolving, and K-12 teaching is one of the last markets to see that change,” Baranwal said. “Live, synchronous, structured teaching will solve countless problems for K-12 schools by providing access to teachers who don’t live or work in the school’s zip code. We are working to ensure that no classroom in America is without a qualified and passionate teacher, and in turn, we are offering a different lifestyle for those teachers who want to teach differently, allowing them the flexibility to teach from anywhere, which will keep them in the profession longer and drive more talent to the profession.”

For more information about the Elevate Teacher Initiative and opportunities with Elevate K-12, visit www.elevatek12.com/teachwithus.

About Elevate K-12

Elevate K-12 is a Chicago-based instructional services company that brings high-quality live streamed instruction into K-12 classrooms. Schools and districts partner with Elevate K-12’s unique instructional solution to solve their teacher shortage challenges and overuse of long-term substitutes or low-quality teachers. Its tech-enabled service comprises Proprietary Live Instructional Management Technology, Live Instruction Service, Curriculum and Classroom Management to provide the necessary tools for collaborative teaching and learning that emulates the experience of a real, physical classroom. Elevate K-12 currently operates in 27 states and is rapidly expanding to new states and districts across the U.S. in K-12 schools. For more information, visit www.elevatek12.com and follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn.

About General Catalyst

General Catalyst is a venture capital firm that invests in powerful, positive change that endures — for our entrepreneurs, our investors, our people, and society. We support founders with a long-term view who challenge the status quo, partnering with them from seed to growth stage and beyond to build companies that withstand the test of time. With offices in San Francisco, Palo Alto, New York City, London, and Boston, the firm has helped support the growth of businesses such as: Airbnb, Deliveroo, Guild, Gusto, Hubspot, Illumio, Lemonade, Livongo, Oscar, Samsara, Snap, Stripe, and Warby Parker. For more: www.generalcatalyst.com.

The original press release can be found on PR Newswire.

Spencer Hulse is an editor at Grit Daily News. He covers affiliate, viral, and marketing news.


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