Olivia Wahl
20 March 2026
In Part 2 of my @schoolutionspodcast conversation, Dr. Kris Nystrom (founder of Reading the World Inc.) connects the dots among global literacy rates, the world economy, and why what happens in a slum school in Nairobi has a profound economic impact. This discussion highlights the critical role of universal education in addressing poverty and fostering global awareness, underscoring the broader implications for finance and world news. Kris shares: 🌍 Why student success in Kenya is directly tied to the global economy 📖 Project Ripple: a science of reading initiative in Nairobi slum schools with 100:1 student-teacher ratios 💡 The Good Hope Royalty Center, where "all children are royal" and street kids are given unconditional love and a future 🔁 The Sankofa philosophy: "You can go back and fix your mistakes" 👨👩👧 How one literate child creates a ripple of empowered educators, healthier families, and stronger communities 💫Make sure to watch Part 1 & donate here if you can. 📚 CHAPTERS: 00:00 Welcome & Sankofa: "You can go back and fix your mistakes" 02:00 Colonial history & why African literacy rates are low 04:30 Inside Nairobi slum schools: 100 students to 1 teacher 07:30 Project Ripple: science of reading training in APBET schools 09:00 Why global literacy matters to every economy 10:30 By 2050, 1/4 of the world will live in Africa 12:00 The ripple effect: one child teaches their parents to read 13:30 Good Hope Royalty Center & Faith Woge's unconditional love 16:30 "All children are royal" candles, soap & sustainable futures 17:30 How to support Reading the World Inc. 18:00 Closing reflection: the ripple is the whole thing 🔗 RESOURCES MENTIONED: Why Should I Care? Counting Up From SurvivalReading the World ProjectsAPBET schools (Alternative Provision for Basic Education and Training)SUNY New Paltz Science of Reading Center 🎧 New episodes every Monday & Friday with bite-sized Wednesday reel bonus content. 📧 Connect with me if you’d like a thought partner to help you cultivate curious learners who advocate for what they believe in. 🎵 Music: Benjamin Wahl Don't forget to 🔔SUBSCRIBE for more teaching tips, and 💬SHARE with fellow educators! Next Week: We are going somewhere equally unexpected and equally beautiful. Portrait Pals, founded by Tonya Quinn, is redefining what art class can be — pairing children across communities to paint each other's portraits, and in doing so, teaching them that every face tells a story worth seeing. When coaches, teachers, administrators, and families work hand in hand, it fosters a school atmosphere where everyone is inspired and every student is fully engaged in their learning journey.
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