World Savvy Board Announcement: Welcoming Hamse Warfa as Our New CEO

Dear Friends and Supporters of World Savvy,

We are thrilled to share some exciting news with you: The World Savvy Board of Directors is pleased to announce that Hamse Warfa is starting today as our next Chief Executive Officer. This decision follows a comprehensive search process, and we are confident that Hamse’s exceptional leadership and vision will guide World Savvy into a new chapter of growth and impact.

Hamse Warfa is a renowned global leader, democracy and workforce development expert, bestselling author, and speaker with over 25 years of experience across federal and state governments, philanthropy, and the private sector who embodies the principles of global competence. His work has consistently focused on civic engagement and economic development, with a deep commitment to partnering with young people as changemakers. Hamse’s unique journey—from a child refugee from Somalia to a U.S. presidential appointee—has equipped him with the lived experiences and insights needed to lead World Savvy as we continue our mission to transform K-12 education for a diverse and interconnected world.

The Board’s decision to appoint Hamse as our new CEO comes after a rigorous national search process. We partnered with a leading executive search firm that embodies our values and vision for the future. Throughout this process, we were consistently impressed by Hamse’s commitment to education, equity, and innovation. His track record of leadership and impact, both locally and globally, makes him the ideal person to advance World Savvy’s goals and expand our reach.

Hamse’s relationship with World Savvy spans over a decade. As a volunteer, fundraiser, and collaborator, he has long supported our efforts to create inclusive, student-centered learning environments that prepare young people to thrive in an ever-changing world. Now, as CEO, Hamse is ready to build on this foundation and lead World Savvy into a future where an emphasis on the skills necessary to thrive in an interconnected and complex world is the norm in education, not the exception.

As a Board, we are united in our enthusiasm for Hamse’s leadership. We believe his deep knowledge, strategic vision, and personal commitment to equity will be invaluable as we work to reach more students and educators across the country. Here are a few reflections from our Board members:

“I am thrilled to welcome Hamse Warfa as the new CEO of World Savvy,” shares Sarah Smith, a key member of the Board’s Search Committee. “Hamse’s remarkable life and career — as a refugee, an appointee of Governor Tim Walz, and a senior advisor in the State Department — combined with his visionary approach to inclusive, equitable education, make him the perfect leader for World Savvy.”

“As chair of the Transition Task Force Committee, I’m thrilled to welcome Hamse Warfa as the next CEO for World Savvy,” says Kathlene Campbell. “His wealth of knowledge and expertise will continue to uplift the important work of World Savvy that outgoing CEO and Co-Founder Dana Mortenson began 22 years ago.”

As we prepare to welcome Hamse into his new role, we want to express our deep gratitude to Dana Mortenson, our Co-Founder and outgoing CEO, for her visionary leadership and tireless dedication over the past two decades. Dana’s legacy will continue to inspire our work, and we are fortunate to have her support during this important transition.

We invite you to join us in welcoming Hamse Warfa as World Savvy’s next CEO. We are confident that under his leadership, World Savvy will continue to grow and thrive, advancing our mission to empower the next generation.

Thank you for your continued support and partnership.

Warm regards,
Linda Ireland
Chair of the Board of Directors, World Savvy

Introducing Our New Chief Operating Officer, Joy DesMarais-Lanz

World Savvy is thrilled to welcome the latest addition to our team: Joy DeMarais-Lanz, our new Chief Operating Officer (COO)!  In the midst of World Savvy’s ambitious goals for growing our reach and impact across the country, the COO is responsible for supporting the internal scaling of the organization, leading the executive management team, and developing a performance culture throughout the organization. 

Prior to joining World Savvy, Joy served as an Executive Director at Synergos, an Association Management Company where she led a portfolio of 13 association and not-for-profit clients. Before her tenure at Synergos, Joy held leadership positions at HOBY (Hugh O’Brian Youth Leadership), the National Youth Leadership Council, and three higher education institutions. Praised for her commitment to mentorship, Joy invests her time and energy in nurturing talent, providing guidance, and empowering others. 

We recently got to sit down with Joy and hear more about her story. Follow along with us to learn more about her, her journey to World Savvy, and her connection to our mission to educate and engage youth to learn, work, and thrive as responsible global citizens.

What was your journey with school/education like, and how has it led you to the desire to reimagine education with World Savvy?

In school, I was a bit of an overachiever and very involved—especially because I had educators willing to take some risks and engage me in unique ways. This is how I first began to engage in reimagining what education could be. I attended a school that was initially fairly traditional; however, during my junior and senior years, the school started a “school within a school” model. It was all thematic units and experiential education, combining math, science, social studies, and English, and it was team-taught. I absolutely loved it. This model was funded by the Blandin Foundation, from the Center for School Change. I was so engaged, and even began accompanying the teacher team to workshops at the Center for School Change and talking about young people’s role in school change—how young people needed to have a voice and a seat at the table, something closely aligned with World Savvy’s values and approach. That, combined with being involved in many student organizations, career and technical education, and doing advocacy and training other young people about how to get involved—I was very active even as a student in reimagining what education could be.

After high school, I attended college at St. Catherine University, where I learned the language of social justice and social change, a rich tradition at the school. I also started interning, first at the Center for School Change and then at the National Youth Leadership Council (NYLC), learning the language of service learning and experiential education. That led to me writing a federal grant that resulted in a full-time job at NYLC during my senior year of college. I started there as the Director of Youth and Strategic Initiatives while still a student, after which I transitioned into a full-time role. 

If it weren’t for my high school teachers who were willing to take a risk and do some innovative, collaborative teaching and learning, I wouldn’t be in the career that I’m in today. I have immense gratitude for that group of teachers for being risk-takers. Because they were willing to think about teaching and learning differently, it had a direct impact on my life and my career—and my journey to World Savvy.

Could you tell us more about the rest of your career that has led you to this point—to joining the World Savvy team?

At NYLC, I was doing a lot of work training teachers and young people how to work together through youth-adult partnerships and service learning, school change work, and opening space for youth to serve on boards. I then decided that I wanted to be an educator myself. So I left NYLC for graduate school and, afterward, I went into higher education for eleven years, teaching at three different institutions. During that time, I really dug into teaching methodology, and I stayed connected to K-12 education—even though I was in higher education—through some training and consulting, including with the Department of Education. This work led me to Anoka-Ramsey Community College, where I launched the service learning program there. 

After that, in the role I’m transitioning out of at Synergos, I’ve now worked in Association Management for ten years. I wanted to be an Executive Director of a nonprofit, and I saw this role that looked so similar—and in the process learned that there was this whole world of association management that I hadn’t known existed. So for the last ten years, I’ve worked with professional societies and trade associations as their fractional Executive Director, helping them lead the charge around strategic plans, governance, and operationalizing their goals. 

Recently though, I’ve been craving a return to my roots in the school change world and working with young people. Especially now as a mother—my kids are currently in the Anoka-Hennepin school district, which is the largest school district in Minnesota—and helping my middle school student navigate this period of their education, I realized I wanted to be working with change agents who are committed to reimagining education. I want to play some role in that again with World Savvy.

It’s clear that the mission of World Savvy resonates deeply with you. Can you tell us a bit more about that?

The goal of educating for global competence—preparing students with the skills, attitudes, and behaviors necessary to thrive in an ever-changing and complex world—and especially through the lens of preparing young for jobs that don’t yet exist, is so important. The ability to learn, and unlearn, and relearn is so critical in our current economy, and our education system is just not set up to do that. It is critical that we, as stakeholders in education, ask questions and push the system to start thinking about the imperative of preparing young people differently.

I’m so excited to join the World Savvy team as the new COO. I’m excited to work with people who I think are smarter than I am—that will make me smarter. Throughout the entire process, I’ve been so impressed by everybody, and so impressed by the mission and the values of the organization—especially the commitment to recognizing that we are all human, that we focus on collaboration, and that not only what we do but how we do it matters. The idea how we communicate with one another, how we make decisions, and how we serve in leadership is just as important as what we achieve, I am very aligned with. I’m excited to be a sponge, to absorb and learn, but also to contribute in this type of professional community that is in some ways modeling what we hope World Savvy’s work in schools will yield for young people.

As a final question, a fun one: tell us a bit about yourself outside of work.

I have a 13-year-old, and then I have a bonus daughter who is 24 and another who is 27, and I am a bonus grandma to my 27-year-old’s 5-year-old. I also have fourteen nieces and nephews! So I spend a lot of time with my family—I just love hanging out with them, especially as my nieces and nephews are getting older and starting their lives. It’s so fun to see where they are going. I also love to travel. My husband for many years had a job with Delta, so we had many adventures flying standby. We love to see new places, see new things, and expose ourselves to new ideas. I’m also a reader, and my guilty pleasure is binge-watching TV—which I used to feel guilty about, but not anymore! I feel I have fairly typical hobbies, but the throughline is that I just love learning about people, love learning about different ideas—whether through travel, relationships, or reading—I just love consistently exposing myself to new things.

Thank you, Joy. We are so thrilled you’ve joined the World Savvy team!

Introducing Our New Chief Growth Officer, Allison Aliaga

Later this month, the World Savvy team is thrilled to welcome the latest addition to our team: Allison Aliaga, our new Chief Growth Officer (CGO)! The CGO is responsible for identifying, developing, and executing strategies to expand World Savvy’s reach and impact and support significant and sustainable scaling of the organization. 

Allison joins World Savvy after over a decade supporting school districts and state-level education efforts at TNTP, and more recently, serving as Vice President at New Teacher Center. Her career began in the classroom, teaching elementary school, and later working as an instructional coach supporting teachers’ literacy practices. Since 2010, Allison has collaborated with a range of foundations, organizations, and government agencies on large-scale initiatives focused on educator growth, well-being, and improving the student experience. Throughout her career, she has helped organizations in the social sector discover how they can best contribute to solving society’s most pressing challenges. 

We recently got to sit down with Allison and hear more about her story. Follow along with us to learn more about her, her journey to World Savvy, and her connection to our mission to educate and engage youth to learn, work, and thrive as responsible global citizens.

Tell us a bit about your story and why the mission of World Savvy resonates with you.

I’ll start with the story of how I became an American.

My parents are originally from Peru. In the late 70s, my mom was a school principal and my dad was studying to be an engineer. They had recently gotten married and had every intention of starting a family. However, Peru was also experiencing a lot of political instability. Eventually, life became tough—even basic things like finding enough food were difficult, and they were afraid of potentially raising a child in such a violent and politically unstable context. They knew they needed to leave, but wanted to go somewhere they knew the language and could continue their trajectory. They decided to move to Mexico and applied for asylum. 

After waiting for several months, they were denied asylum and stranded in Mexico. My father’s siblings who were living in Los Angeles hired a coyote. A coyote is someone who transports immigrants across the US-Mexico border. 

Like so many others before them, my parents crossed the US-Mexico border. Unlike many others, they made it safely across the border until they got into a car accident on the way to Los Angeles. My mom was injured and had to be taken to a hospital. She always tells me how kind the medical staff was to her even though she didn’t understand the language. She does remember understanding “Congratulations, you are having a baby.” That’s when my mom learned she was three months pregnant with me. That’s how I became an American.

My story is part of a larger American story. It is a story of people who had the audacity to flee violence and instability to start over in the unknown. It is a small sample of the true genius of America, “That all men are created equal. That they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights. That among those are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” In no other country can two young adults cross a border with only the clothes on their backs, get jobs, eventually become citizens, and raise two children who were housed, fed, and more importantly given a childhood. 

It is this idea that makes World Savvy’s mission resonate with me. That educating and engaging youth to learn, work, and thrive as global citizens requires us to hold the liberties we have as Americans close to heart. These liberties allow us to approach educating young people with a belief that they learn best when they are engaged in relevant and important issues that impact their communities and world. It is this belief that recognizes that it is critical that we prepare students to be engaged citizens, life-long learners, problem solvers, and critical thinkers. This unlocks the genius of students so they can lead a life where they have the freedom to live up to their highest potential.

What was your journey with education like? 

My journey with education is complicated. 

Both my parents are college educated and my mom was a former elementary school teacher. The expectation that I would someday go to college was made clear as far back as I could remember. My mom made sure that I entered kindergarten ready. If you would have asked me to describe myself on the first day of kindergarten I would have told you I was a reader, a writer, that I was smart, that I was a good kid, that I was beautiful. I would have told you I loved to learn and that I couldn’t wait to learn English and be bilingual.

School challenged these beliefs. I realized pretty quickly that what I knew did not matter unless it was in English. I remember sitting at a table crying while the other kids were at recess, and I had to sit with the teacher and repeat the names of shapes and numbers in English. I didn’t understand why she seemed so mad and why I had to repeat each word over and over again when I knew what the shapes were and what the numbers meant. That same year, I liked wearing pretty dresses until a little boy asked me, “Why are you wearing that? It’s too fancy and makes your skin look like poop.” 

School became a place where I yearned to belong and where I got farther away from the sense of self I had entered with. I became a great chameleon, learned to speak English without an accent, and became fluent at reading any room to blend in and be as likable (as American) as possible.  

School was also a place that opened doors of opportunity. It was also in school where I encountered grown-ups who were deeply invested in their students and who saw me past the masks I wore. This was my first grade teacher who told me I was lucky to be bilingual because it meant I could communicate with more people. This was my high school English teacher who told me I was an honest writer and it was my cross country coach who would confidently announce that I was a fast runner. It was my high school counselor who assured me I was competitive enough to apply to top colleges and who walked me and my family through the labyrinthine college application process. It was these grown-ups and many others who gave me room to grow into my own potential. 

Tell us a bit about your career and your journey to World Savvy.

I always thought I would be an educator. My grandmother and mother were educators, and I followed in their footsteps working as an elementary teacher and literacy coach. I was preparing to transition into the school leadership role when I was working at a school in Los Angeles that was located in an affluent neighborhood but where the majority of the students were bused in. It was there that I had an experience where I had a significant experience attending two back-to-back meetings for two students with learning differences.

The first student was bused in from downtown Los Angeles. His meeting lasted all but 10 minutes with his mother agreeing to the support plan that was suggested. The second student was from the neighborhood, her parents showed up with their attorney. I was impressed at how effectively the attorney advocated for the support the student needed and deserved and I felt ashamed that I did not have the knowledge or the tools to do the same for the first student.

It was that experience that prompted me to apply to law school. I wanted to be an advocate for my students and I wanted to have the knowledge and tools to do so effectively. Life had other plans. It was at that time that the country was going through a financial recession and with that school leadership jobs were scarce. I was introduced to the non-profit sector, first working at the KIPP Foundation and then at the ACLU. It was there where I experienced the critical role of the social sector in working side-by-side with communities to do better than the generations that came before us and build something better for the generations to come. 

I joined TNTP in 2010 where I oversaw a wide range of work that implemented TNTP’s offerings across curriculum, instruction, assessment, talent management and community engagement. TNTP was also a place where I learned that scaling work is more than sales. It is about understanding communities’ hopes and dreams and understanding if and how an organization is best positioned to support. It is this mindset that stayed with me through my work at New Teacher Center, where I led the organization’s revenue generating efforts. It was here that I had an opportunity to build on the great work of those who came before me and build an infrastructure to support through a new period of growth and through a new strategic plan. 

My work is all about telling stories about the work people in communities across the country are doing to make their hopes and dreams for young people come true. This is the best part of my job and I am excited for the next chapter at World Savvy. 

What an incredible journey to World Savvy—we are so excited to have you on the team! As a final question, a fun one: tell us a bit about yourself outside of work.

I am grateful for how full my life is. I am a mom to two boys who just want to hold my hand and jam through life. We are at the stage where we are everywhere, always doing something, mostly going to sports practices, baseball games and swim meets. I also have a strong support system of family and friends–nurturing these relationships is very important to me. Physical activity feeds my soul. I do something active every day. I’m a former long-distance runner but have recently developed a love for weightlifting and am on a journey to overcome my fear of the ocean. Recently, I bought a paddleboard and have been taking it to the beach any chance I get. 

Thank you, Allison. We can’t wait to have you join the World Savvy team!

The Fierce Urgency of Now: Reimagining Education at the Speed of Change

We live in unprecedented times. New challenges, opportunities, and technologies present themselves almost daily. The future of work is a moving target, and changing demographics and global challenges require new skills and dispositions to successfully navigate our communities and workplaces.

New York Times columnist Tom Friedman says we are living through a “Promethean moment.” We cannot slow the pace of change, but we can transform our education system to meet this moment and adequately prepare all young people to thrive in their communities, locally and globally.

Here are three important ways to reimagine learning and create a system that helps students know more, care more, and do more.

Elevate skills

If we want young people to be responsible and engaged citizens, we need to teach them the skills and dispositions this requires. We must rethink and reimagine the classroom experience, along with the traditional assessments teachers have used. No longer should we be grading to see if a student knows dates, facts, and definitions—they can find that information on their phones. Instead, we should be grading their ability to think critically and creatively about the information before them, ask deep and probing questions, seek out multiple perspectives, form opinions based on fact and exploration, and find comfort in ambiguity. 

In life, there are no easy answers. Why should school be different? 

It is also time that we shift our language when describing empathy, resilience, and collaboration. These are not “soft skills.” In our complex and interconnected world, they are essential skills, and they should be taught and assessed with intention and urgency.  

Elevate relevance

At a recent event in rural Minnesota, I shared a series of statements with students and asked them to stand if it applied to them. “I use the internet everyday.” Everyone was on their feet. “What I learn in school feels relevant to my life outside of school.” No one moved.

Students can practice critical thinking, research, empathy, and collaboration with any topic, so why not give them topics relevant to their lives right now and that prepare them to engage in a world that is complex, interconnected and rapidly changing? 

This shift requires a reimagining of the role of school. So much of K-12 education is about core requirements and checking boxes. It is based on what adults think kids should know, just in case. But a just-in-case education is not getting it done. We need a just-in-time model that encourages curiosity, perspective taking, and deep thinking. We can give students work that directly connects to the world beyond the classroom so that they can begin to make sense of the present and get prepared for the future. 

Elevate student choice and agency

Many schools offer students choices when it comes to the classes they take. It is good for kids to have options, but none of those choices matter as much as the choices they get to make once they are in the classroom.  

Students need to have a voice in their own learning. Essential skills like critical thinking, coping and resilience, and questioning prevailing assumptions can be demonstrated in a myriad of ways, so let’s give students some power over how they show growth in these areas. When teachers move from the center of the classroom, a place where they are the keepers of knowledge, and into the role of facilitators of their students’ learning, they empower students to fully and authentically engage with the material and learn to think for themselves. There is nothing more powerful than asking a student, “What do you care most about?” and seeing their curiosity ignited. Schools can and should help students identify their passions and prepare them to take informed action on the issues that matter to them.

School should not be a place that kids have to get through in order to do something more exciting; it should not be a box that has to be checked. School should be a place where important and complex work gets done, where students feel seen and valued, and where they learn how to see and value others. By centering the development of the essential skills and dispositions that young people need to thrive in this ever-changing world, schools can create learning spaces that are relevant, inclusive, and engaging—places where students want to be. We can transform classrooms into places that move beyond what kids know and instead focus on what kids can do with what they know. This is what the world needs: a generation of young people who are curious, empathetic, critical thinkers who will take action on issues of global significance. 

The time is now to start reimagining what is possible, so that young people can graduate not only with the skills and dispositions they need, but that the world needs.

— Mallory Tuominen

Mallory Tuominen is the chief program officer at World Savvy. Beginning her career as a classroom teacher, Mallory was quickly exposed to the inequities in public education and worked diligently to create a classroom that was inclusive, relevant and real-world based, while holding all of her students to high standards. A desire to work more closely with educators to develop their cultural competence inspired Mallory to leave the classroom and join the Minnesota Humanities Center. Working closely with community members in Minneapolis, St. Paul and Greater Minnesota, Mallory developed and facilitated humanities-based professional development offerings for educators. 

Prior to joining World Savvy in 2015, Mallory worked as an Assessment Manager in Chicago Public Schools providing leadership around assessment for student learning for the district’s high schools. She also worked as an Instructional Supports Manager for Minneapolis Public Schools, collaborating to support the district’s new and tenured educators through professional development and mentorship. Throughout her 15 year career in education, Mallory’s focus has always remained on high-quality teaching and learning and providing educators with professional learning opportunities to transform practice. 

Mallory holds a BA in History and an MEd in Social Studies Education, both from the University of Minnesota. She also holds an MEd in Education, Culture and Society from DePaul University and a certificate in Instructional Design from the University of Illinois – Urbana Champaign. She can be reached at mallory@worldsavvy.org.

Student Changemakers Collaborate to Reimagine Education in Saginaw County, Michigan

Local media outlet WNEM 5 covered World Savvy’s Changemaker Hub in Saginaw, Michigan on April 30, 2024. In partnership with Saginaw ISD, the Changemaker Hub brought together nearly 140 students, educators, school leaders, and community members from eight districts in the county. In this day-long learning experience, participants collaboratively reflected and ideated on how to build inclusive school environments that allow ALL students to thrive–in school, and as adults in the future. 

“We’re here with other educators and people from our community and we’re discussing things that we want to see changed, and they’re listening to us, they’re taking notes, they’re engaging. They seem to be very understanding. It makes me feel like I’m seen and the other people who are sharing are seen as well and hopefully that changes are to come,” shared one student.

Read the article here.

About World Savvy

World Savvy is an organization that partners with schools and districts to reimagine education and create more inclusive, student-centered, and future-ready learning communities. We are continuing to expand our work across the country. Connect us with a school or learn more about our school partnership opportunities.

Michigan Students and Educators Explore New Ideas for Education at World Savvy Changemaker Hub

World Savvy CEO and Co-founder Dana Mortensen and Superintendent Jeffrey Collier were interviewed by a local Michigan media outlet at our Changemaker Hub on April 30, 2024. Held in partnership with Saginaw ISD, this World Savvy design-thinking experience brought together nearly 140 students, educators, school leaders, and community members from multiple school districts. Collaboratively, they reflected on their learning and explored ideas to build inclusive school environments that allow ALL students to thrive–in school, and as adults in the future. 

Watch the news segment here.

About World Savvy

World Savvy is an organization that partners with schools and districts to reimagine education and create more inclusive, student-centered, and future-ready learning communities. We are continuing to expand our work across the country. Connect us with a school or learn more about our school partnership opportunities.

Learning from the Future: Moving from What Is to What If?

In the second domain of effective leadership, according to Harvard Business School, one must forget the past and let go of practices that fuel the current system. Yet in education, we often look to the past for answers on how to navigate the future. 

In the April issue of the New York State Council of School Superintendents (NYSCOSS) Councilgram newsletter, World Savvy team members (KK Neimann, National Director of District & Strategic Initiatives, and Melanie Peterson-Nafziger, Professional Learning Facilitator) co-authored an article that encourages education leaders to think creatively and expansively about shaping the future of teaching and learning.

“While these ideas might feel impossible, we can derive value from what came before: 30 years ago, eliminating textbooks or teaching without a physical campus seemed preposterous. What is the next impossible dream?”

Read the article on page 12.

NYSCOSS is the primary membership organization in New York for school superintendents.

About World Savvy

World Savvy is an organization that partners with schools and districts to reimagine education and create more inclusive, student-centered, and future-ready learning communities. We are continuing to expand our work across the country. Connect us with a school or learn more about our school partnership opportunities.

A World Savvy Approach to Navigating the Future of Education

Our National Director of District and Strategic Initiatives KK Neimann explores World Savvy’s innovative approach to education on The Good Life EDU Podcast presented by Nebraska’s ESU Coordinating Council. In KK’s words, World Savvy is a “capacity builder.” Through multi-year Comprehensive School Partnerships, we work with school leaders and educators to embed global competence and create inclusive, adaptive, and future-ready learning environments.

Tune in to learn more about global competencies, fostering teacher empowerment, and enhancing support for students! 

Listen to the podcast here. 

World Savvy is continuing to expand our work with schools and districts across the country. Reimagine education with us and learn more about our school partnership opportunities to embed global competence into your learning environment.

Navigating Change and Ambiguity with World Savvy

World Savvy team members, National Director of District & Strategic Initiatives KK Neimann and Executive Director – Western Region Harben Porter, were invited to talk about our transformational work on the Make It Mindful education podcast with hosts Seth Fleischauer and Lauren Pinto.

In this episode, the hosts explore the concept of global competence with KK and Harben and in doing so, talk about how it can prepare students for the increasing complexity and unpredictability of our future. A key challenge schools face today is ensuring students graduate with the core skills that will be needed in a future that’s changing at such a rapid pace we can’t fully predict what jobs to prepare students for! KK shares that there is one certain thing we can tell young people about the future: they need to be prepared to navigate change and ambiguity. 

Listen to the podcast here.

How can schools equip their students with these essential skills to thrive in an uncertain future? World Savvy’s answer is through teaching for global competence – developing the skills, behaviors, and dispositions needed to thrive in a diverse, complex, and interconnected world. 

KK and Harben also discuss the need for a shift in the traditional approach to teaching, toward one that’s more student-centered. Through our Comprehensive School Partnerships, World Savvy supports teachers to not only embed global competence into the classroom but also to make learning more relevant and personal to students so that they feel connected to the content, leading to better student outcomes. 

But none of this is easy and pushback to new concepts and ideas is bound to happen. Perhaps Harben says it best. World Savvy is a partner that helps schools navigate “the messy work of systems change and transformation.” Learn more about our school partnership opportunities or connect us with a school today!

World Savvy Changemaker Hub Brings Together Ohio Middle School Students

The Lorain County Chronicle-Telegram spotlighted World Savvy’s Changemaker Hub hosted at Lorain County Community College in Ohio on February 22, 2024. The day-long design thinking experience was attended by approximately 120 students and 15 educators from area schools, including Avon, Elyria, North Ridgeville, and Lorain. Together, they reimagined the future of learning and centered student voices to understand their perspective on how to better the educational experience.

“Southview eighth grader Josiah Dolores Laboy wants to see more people taking education seriously, saying that school is a place for not just learning but also having fun.”

Read the article here. 

About World Savvy

World Savvy is an organization that partners with schools and districts to reimagine education and create more inclusive, student-centered, and future-ready learning communities. We are continuing to expand our work across the country. Connect us with a school or learn more about our school partnership opportunities.