UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Project TEAM is a school-wide anti-bullying movement to help schools develop and strengthen team-oriented cultures, and its founder is attempting to make its overall reach even wider.
Program developer Linsey Covert, an instructor in the Department of Educational Psychology, Counseling and Special Education at Penn State, formed TEAMology to commercialize the intellectual property of Project TEAM to scale and grow the program.
TEAMology was one of the first companies formed under Penn State President Eric Barron’s Invent Penn State initiative.
Covert said a teacher software as a service platform was designed to provide easy access to the curriculum and content; provide microbadges for schools; allow for program monitoring; and provide a place for schools to collaborate.
About 55 schools across several states are part of Project TEAM for the 2019-20 school year.
“We continue to focus on helping schools provide an immersive way to integrate social-emotional learning, bullying prevention and career readiness,” Covert said.
Project TEAM is a holistic, school-wide program that provides social and emotional learning, career readiness and bullying prevention.
Students are taught and reinforced daily with six main concepts: helping others, positive change, anti-bullying, problem-solving, resiliency and leadership.
Years of research conducted by Covert, Professor of Education Richard Hazler, and Associate Professor of Education JoLynn Carney has revealed a 63% decrease in defiant behaviors, a 53% decrease in physical altercations, and a 70% decrease in disruptive classroom behavior in participating schools.