t.Lab

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t.Lab, a high-performance learning laboratory for families and students from pre-kindergarten through undergraduate company headquartered in Garden City, Michigan. t.Lab was established to increase US-based students' competitiveness while leveraging a global leadership model. t.Lab has served more than 3800 parents and students since its inception in 2007 and has students from the USA , Kenya, Nigeria, Hungary, Lebanon, and the Philippines.


t.Lab’s curriculum primary focuses on humanities, liberal arts education, and STEM [1]disciplines that will enable students to prepare and compete in a dynamic global marketplace.  As of 2020, t.Lab’s median composite ACT [2]score among students is 30.7 and its students have realized more than $17M in college scholarships. Dr. Nixon and t.Lab were honored with Information Technology Service Management Forum[3] Ivory Dome Award for Technology in Education in 2012; McDonald’s Corporation Community Leadership Award in 2019; Best of Garden City Award (Educational Institution) in 2019; USMCA (US Minority Contractors Association) Hon. Thurgood Marshall Pioneer Legacy Award in 2019; and Crain’s Detroit’s Notable Nonprofit Board Member in 2021.

CURRICULUM

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Core academic programs provided in T.LAB are Math, English, Humanities, Reading, Computer Science, Science, Technology, Vocabulary, Writing, Language, SAT, ACT, Research and Development, Parent University (for parents only)

INITIATIVE

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The Drive to 25 is t.Lab's initiative that aims to increase the median ACT [4]score of African Americans from 16.7 (lowest in the nation) to 25 by 2025. One of its goals is to guide and direct African American students into STEM [5](Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math) majors and careers in the marketplace.

REFERENCE

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  1. ^ "Science, technology, engineering, and mathematics", Wikipedia, 2023-01-30, retrieved 2023-02-03
  2. ^ "ACT (test)", Wikipedia, 2022-12-09, retrieved 2023-02-03
  3. ^ "IT Service Management Forum", Wikipedia, 2022-08-12, retrieved 2023-02-03
  4. ^ "ACT (test)", Wikipedia, 2022-12-09, retrieved 2023-02-03
  5. ^ "Science, technology, engineering, and mathematics", Wikipedia, 2023-01-30, retrieved 2023-02-03