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No Right Brain Left Behind works to build a library for the 21st Century

No Right Brain Left Behind aims to instill creativity in education by providing "leaps in learning, not just steps."
/ Source: MSNBC TV

No Right Brain Left Behind aims to instill creativity in education by providing "leaps in learning, not just steps."

Viktor Venson, co-founder of No Right Brain Left Behind. (Courtesy of Viktor Venson)

There are “lots of opportunities” but “too much dead space” in schools right now, the founder of No Right Brain Left Behind told MSNBC.

Teachers working with outdated tools educate the country’s young generations, which is a problem, Viktor Venson said. They need to be leaders in design, which can be achieved with the means that can enhance their jobs and empower creativity.

“You look at these people–the teachers, the schools, the facilities–and to us it doesn’t make sense that the future, the human potential, is being developed under these circumstances, a 19th-century model,” Venson told MSNBC.

Beginning in 2011, No Right Brain Left Behind gave creative industries the challenge to rethink education. Panels have chosen ideas submitted from hundreds of teams around the country with the ultimate goal of picking one idea to execute. The mission is to instill innovation and creativity in education, and re-imagine the concept and experience of a library. The team provides “leaps in learning, not just steps,” Venson said.

“Education is not a place where you go to just learn. Education is a place for development of experiences. The development of your potential human being, to find your passion,” he said.

Venson works with schools in high-risk areas that are in the bottom 10%, where the main issues arise, he said. The group collaborates with Green Dot Public Schools, which is also located in Los Angeles, Calif.

“We want to provide these students with the same opportunities, same technology, same innovation that can be accessed in private schools,” he said.

In addition to rethinking the library concept, the group is building a new way for students to interface with computers and educational software.

“We have a strategy and a model to address the public education crisis in a very powerful way that’s scalable,” Venson said. “We approach education from a new lens.”

No Right Brain Left Behind was chosen as one of five finalists in the Feast contest. Each innovator has received one ticket to the 2013 Feast Conference, which focuses on learning, health, and veterans. The organization with the most votes by Oct. 6 will receive a speaker spot at the three-day conference, which begins on Oct. 16 in New York City, for the chance to call participants to action.