There’s an undeniable thrill in prompt engineering. Turning a vague idea into a solid outline in mere minutes is ...
Matterlab Team
More from this author:
The teacher shortage is a crisis we can’t ignore. The countless stories I hear from friends, family, and educators ...
We're excited to announce three Matterlab sessions at SXSW EDU this year! All three sessions feature Matterlab ...
Matterlab exists to catalyze education organizations across the country. What better way to do that than through SXSW EDU? We're proud to partner with the following incredible leaders to present at the conference — and we need your support!
Matterlab is grateful to have been chosen as a 2023 Real Leaders Impact Award winner!
“Since we were named for ...
Women We Admire announced The Top 50 Women Leaders of Austin for 2022. This year’s honorees include Matterlab’s ...
As we embark on a new year, it’s a great opportunity to envision something new for our work. It’s an even better ...
Each week at The Matterlab Group, we all get together to participate in something called the “Week in Review.” ...
Afzal Habiban, Digital Advertising Specialist, is a digital content expert with years of experience helping ...
Looking for an opportunity to make change? We're excited to share two social impact job opportunities with our ...
Know any high school juniors or seniors who are motivated, curious, and interested in exploring their purpose in life as they look ahead to post-secondary options like college and career?
Charter schools were always meant to solve community challenges: access to learning opportunities, stagnant education models, lack of specialized schools based on student needs. In the two decades since charter schooling first became popularized, have they succeeded?
Samantha Tweedy is the Chief Partnership and Impact Officer at Robin Hood Foundation and a board member of ...
Nonprofit powerhouse leaders are coming together for a virtual panel discussion designed to catalyze sector-wide ...
We just learned about this, and we’re sharing it with everyone we know!
Language is inherently viral, which is how new phrases enter our lexicon seemingly overnight. It’s true in popular culture (many of us on the team just learned what ‘no cap’ means) and in the socio-political sphere. The term ‘anti-racism’ was not invented in 2020, but its use has gone viral as the way to describe in eleven short characters the work we as individuals and a nation need to do to identify and eliminate racism by changing the systems, structures, policies and practices that protect and promote it.