Replicable Models of Innovation Series: Innovation Center of St. Vrain Valley Schools

Replicable Models of Innovation Series: Innovation Center of St. Vrain Valley Schools

BYJahnell Pereira 9/25/18 6:28 AM

We are officially launching our “Replicable Models of Innovation” series. Schools and districts across the nation are developing and implementing models of innovation to increase the number of students who are ready to engage in STEM fields, both in the workforce and as a course of study. The intention of this series is to share replicable and scalable models of innovation in the hopes that they can inspire, support, and help other educators cultivate their own plans.

The Innovation Center of St. Vrain Valley Schools

This week marks an exciting – and major – milestone in the evolution of the Innovation Center (IC) of St. Vrain Valley Schools. The team is celebrating the grand opening of their new state-of-the-art facility in Longmont, Colorado. The new building was funded by a local bond initiative approved by taxpayers in 2016.If you are in the area,please come joing the fun! We will be sending a SparkFun team to do a paper-circuit activity with kids.

Innovation Center of St. Vrain Valley Schools


The Center is a centralized program that serves the district’s 32,000 students. 
The mission of the Innovation Center is to provide students and educators opportunities to foster extraordinary ideas through cutting-edge technologies, innovative projects and industry mentorships in order to solve authentic problems. The IC is a “
catalyst, incubator, accelerator, and bridge between education, industry, and our community” (Innovation Center
web site

From a SparkFun perspective, there are many components of the Innovation Center that make it a standout program for young people. A few key examples include:

  • Lowering the barrier of entry into STEM learning: The Innovation Center is open to all students and reflects the demographics of the school district. Students at the IC receive access to cutting-edge learning opportunities, including client-based projects, industry certifications, and inspiration. (Truth be told, very few of us have access to the types of tools and experiences that are available at the IC.)
  • Giving students the chance to solve real problems: At SparkFun, the majority of our community are engineers, entrepreneurs and hobbyists whose passion is DIY electronics. All of these groups like to solve problems. Not contrived problems, but real problems. We are major fans of the fact that the IC provides real problems for students to solve. Often, the IC partners with a local business owner in the the community that has a challenge that goes beyond their technical abilities – they pose the problem to the students at the Innovation Center to solve. This is AWESOME – students are working with clients to build out real solutions!
  • Collaborating with higher education and industry: The IC strives to build alignment with both higher education and industry. This ensures that, at the end of the day, the IC is providing students with the skills and knowledge to enter post-secondary studies or be hired into specialized positions. Additionally, this gives business and community partners a voice in the process and the opportunity to be involved with such a future-thinking endeavor (this is how SparkFun originally became an IC partner). 

Needless to say, we here at SparkFun are Innovation Center fans. It is our hope, that by sharing a bit about their story and their model, that others will be able to find some nugget to help move their own school and district innovation plans forward.