Knowledgehook named BNN’s Top Disruptor of Season 3

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TORONTO, Ont. (June 2, 2016) – Knowledgehook was today named Top Disruptor of BNN’s original series about tech innovators, The Disruptors.

Knowledgehook, a software company that analyzes the academic performance of math students in real-time play to recommend alternative teaching practices, was one of 38 companies to this season pitch their business concept to hosts Bruce Croxton and Amber Kanwar.

“We’ve been watching The Disruptors since founding Knowledgehook in 2014 and following many of the companies they report on,” CEO Travis Ratnam says. “We’re excited and humbled by this acknowledgement.”

Startups profiled on each segment of BNN’s The Disruptors, a weekly, half-hour program that airs at 7 p.m. on Thursdays, compete each season for the Top Disruptor title.

Following tonight’s appearance, Knowledgehook will be given the opportunity to pitch Croxton’s investment company, Round 13.

Winning the Top Disruptor title comes less than a month since Knowledgehook received Google’s Game Changer Award at the tech giant’s annual Demo Day in Silicon Valley.

To date, more than 6,000 Ontario math teachers have begun zeroing in on each students’ key misunderstandings after reviewing predictive insights which Knowledgehook software generates.

Early results from Knowledgehook suggest that at least 1 in 6 Ontario students in Grade 9 Applied Math are struggling to understand ratios. Knowledgehook unpacks their misunderstanding and suggests how teachers can address it.

The finding, which echoes those of Ontario’s 2015 standardized tests, is based on analysis of more than 2,400 anonymized users between September and April 2016, accurate to within 95% confidence, and a margin of error of 2.5%.

Knowledgehook was founded by Travis Ratnam, Lambo Jayapalan, Arthur Lui and James Francis.

The team is grateful for the support of mentors from Communitech’s Rev and the Accelerator Centre’s AC JumpStart programs.

AC Client Knowledgehook wins Google’s Game Changer Award at 2016 Demo Day

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Photo credit Peter Lee, Waterloo Region Record staff

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. (May 4, 2016) — Canadian edtech startup Knowledgehook today received Google’s Game Changer Award at the tech giant’s annual Demo Day in Silicon Valley.

Travis Ratnam and James Francis were among the co-founders of 11 new tech companies invited to Silicon Valley to pitch today to a room full of top investors, venture capitalists and judges.

“We’re thrilled and grateful to have shared the stage with so many talented and passionate entrepreneurs,” Travis says. “The support we’ve received today will be pivotal to our mission of helping students all over the world build their math skills.”

Knowledgehook, based in Waterloo, Ont. has developed software that analyzes the academic performance of math students in real-time play to recommend to educators alternative teaching practices.

A popular exam prep tool among the 5,000 teachers in Canada and the United States who use it, Knowledgehook software unpacks students’ misunderstanding and suggests how teachers can address it.

Since September 2015, 12 Ontario school boards have been reviewing predictive insights the software generates for each student to help teachers adapt their lessons for optimal learning.

For example, early results from Knowledgehook suggest that at least 1 in 6 Ontario students in Grade 9 Applied Math are struggling to understand ratios. The finding, which echoes those of Ontario’s 2015 standardized tests, is based on analysis of more than 2,400 anonymized users between September and April 2016, accurate to within 95% confidence, and a margin of error of 2.5%.

“We’re optimistic that the accuracy and timeliness of Knowledgehook’s insights will advance school boards in their efforts to improve students’ academic performance,” Travis says.

To be selected to participate in Google’s annual Demo Day, startups must be legally incorporated and headquartered in the United States, Canada or Mexico and be actively raising a Series A round of between $1- and 4-million.

Knowledgehook was founded in 2014 by Travis Ratnam, Lambo Jayapalan, Arthur Lui and James Francis.

The team is grateful for the support of mentors from Communitech’s Rev and the Accelerator Centres’ AC JumpStartprograms, and, for recent funding delivered by Ontario Centres for Excellence (OCE).

Former AC CEO Tim Jackson to lead prestigious national program SHAD

Tim Jackson

STEAM based summer youth program fosters youth innovation and entrepreneurship

WATERLOO, Ont. – As a technology entrepreneur in the late 1990’s, Tim Jackson was one of the leaders who put Waterloo on the map as it became known as Canada’s Silicon Valley.

More recently, he has been Executive Vice President at the MaRS Discovery District in Toronto, one of the world’s largest urban innovation hubs. At MaRS, through the Centre for Impact Investing, he encouraged foundations to invest millions of dollars in a novel way to tackle social problems aligned with their charitable objectives.

Now, Tim Jackson has his sights set on making more people in Canada familiar with four letters they may not know: SHAD.
He says it is crucial that exceptional youth are given the support they need to reach their full potential especially if Canada wants to be a leader when it comes to innovation and entrepreneurship.

The 2015 Global Innovation Index report ranked Canada 16th in terms of global innovation.
That’s why Jackson is joining SHAD as its new CEO and President starting in July.

“SHAD is like walking into a room and turning on a giant light for the whole country. By transforming these youth through the SHAD program, it makes Canada’s future brighter.”

“Tim is the perfect leader to take us forward from the strong position we currently have,” says David Hay, Chair of SHAD’s Board of Directors.
Hay adds, “Tim’s great passion for entrepreneurship combined with his belief that Canada’s youth are well positioned to tackle some of the world’s biggest problems will ensure that we take SHAD to a new level, making it a household name across Canada.”

SHAD is a unique not for profit organization that serves as an incubator for innovation and entrepreneurship for Canada’s best and brightest students while they are still in high school. Its focus is to empower youth to become change makers and global leaders.

The list of SHAD Fellows include a serial entrepreneur and Dragon on CBC’s Dragons’ Den, a NASA researcher trying to help humans get to Mars, a world leading stem cell researcher, a top NHL executive, an international best-selling author and many other leaders.

“Despite an amazing 35 year track record, SHAD has been one of Canada’s best kept secrets,” Jackson says.

He notes with Canada now focused on youth innovation and entrepreneurship to help fuel the new economy, SHAD is where it all begins.

Top students from around the country apply for coveted positions to take part in SHAD which is hosted at 12 different university campuses. The students are immersed in an intense one month enrichment program in July focused on STEAM subjects: science, technology, engineering, arts and math.

In one of the more unique elements at SHAD, students are presented with a theme or global challenge every summer. They collaborate in small groups using their different skills and expertise to devise an original product or service that addresses this real world, complex issue. In the process, they are taught how to build a business plan, marketing plan and a working prototype under tight deadlines and facing difficult odds.

SHAD Fellows build connections for life and become part of the SHAD network which includes 30 Rhodes Scholars, and leaders in many fields.
“We are putting our top youth at risk if we don’t invest in them with programs such as SHAD,” Jackson says. He adds, “You look at our athletes. We invest in them early and give them a support network so they can be world beaters. We have to do the same for our best and brightest young minds.”

Jackson takes over as President of SHAD at a good time. SHAD has had a record number of applications for the past two years. Barry Bisson helped SHAD become one of Canada’s premier programs fostering youth innovation and entrepreneurship and is retiring after 11 years as President.

“We thank Barry for his amazing commitment to SHAD for more than 30 years,” SHAD Chair David Hay says.
He adds, “Barry became a big believer in SHAD ever since he started the program at the University of New Brunswick in 1985 and saw the impact it had on youth first hand.”

Jackson was one of the senior executives of PixStream, a leading Waterloo technology company in the late 1990’s which helped spur on the careers of many other entrepreneurs in the Waterloo region. Following that, Jackson co-founded a venture capital firm that invested in numerous startup companies. He later served as CEO of the Accelerator Centre, a startup incubator in Waterloo. He has served as a mentor for many individuals and companies because of his understanding of the obstacles, and the failures involved in creating successful ventures. He also spent several years in executive roles with the University of Waterloo.

AC Client wins exclusive invite to pitch investors at Google’s annual Demo Day

WATERLOO, Ont. (April 13, 2016) — Google has invited edtech start-up Knowledgehook to pitch to investors at their annual Demo Day next month in Silicon Valley.

Knowledgehook, the Waterloo, Ont.-based company behind new gaming software that analyzes the academic performance of math students, is one of two Canadian companies selected to participate in the May 4 event. The team joined the Accelerator Centre in 2015 and received of $40,000 in funding and mentorship through the AC JumpStart program, which is funded by the Federal Economic Development Agency for Southern Ontario (FedDev Ontario) .

With the aim of securing additional rounds of investment, co-founders Travis Ratnam and James Francis will pitch on stage to a full room of investors, VCs and respected judges at the Google Headquarters in Mountain View, California.

“We’re thrilled to share our software with potential investors,” Ratnam says.

“We believe our products will be pivotal in connecting teachers and school boards all over the world with data that identifies what concepts students are struggling with and also provides them with immediate teaching solutions.”

Since March 2015, Knowledgehook software has been used by more than 65,000 students and teachers in math classes throughout Canada and the United States.

The team is grateful for the support they have received to date from the Accelerator Centre, Communitech, and for recent funding delivered by Ontario Centres for Excellence (OCE).

Ontario Minister of Research and Innovation Reza Moridi congratulates Knowledgehook of their accomplishments to date.

“Knowledgehook is an example of how our innovation ecosystem has assisted businesses to spur innovation and create a dynamic environment that will improve the lives Ontarians,”he says.

“Ontario’s economic strength depends on the viability of our businesses, large and small. That’s why our government is helping to support unique and cutting-edge collaborations through partners such as OCE, who give our small and medium enterprises exposure to larger tools and skills they need to rapidly scale up to meet global demand.”

Co-founder Ratnam was inspired to build a company that supports alternative learning methods after struggling in his early academic career.

“To understand why I struggled, I exhaustively analyzed my mistakes. By persevering, I found ways to problem-solve that made more sense to me. I’d like others to enjoy learning as much as I did,” he says.

Knowledgehook software analyzes the academic performance of math students in real-time play to recommend to educators alternative teaching practices.