Ask any great teacher, and they’ll tell you: the best moments in education are rarely about the tests or textbooks.
They’re the moments when students surprise you—when a quiet child finds their voice, when a group of kids suddenly starts acting like a team, or when a lesson turns into something they’ll remember for the rest of their lives.
That’s what happens when the classroom becomes a company.
That’s the unexpected magic of teaching BizWorld.
It Starts With a Bracelet. It Becomes a Breakthrough.
Across the country, teachers are using BizWorld to bring entrepreneurship to life; this Teacher Appreciation Week 2025 we’re so excited to feature a few of our change making educators! However, would you believe that they’re not just teaching but what they’re really doing is unlocking something much deeper: confidence, collaboration, critical thinking, and creativity.
Whether it’s a group of fourth graders pitching a new product in Alabama, middle schoolers in Virginia learning how to write resumes and manage a business, or students in California turning string into snowballs and leadership into legacy—BizWorld doesn’t just check the boxes of business education. It changes how students see themselves.
As Wendy Tibbs put it:
“The kid who couldn’t make a bracelet to save his life? He made the funniest commercial in class. Everyone cracked up. That was his moment to shine.”
The Students Take the Lead. The Teachers See the Magic.
Teachers using BizWorld consistently say the same thing: they expected to teach business.
They didn’t expect their students to become businesspeople.
They watch students organize teams, create job roles, run interviews, make decisions, navigate disagreements, and manage money—often for the first time in their lives. They see natural leaders rise, quiet creatives take initiative, and hesitant learners gain confidence.
“At first, I thought it looked like a lot of work,” said Carolyn Tatem. “But once I saw how quickly the students took ownership, I just got out of the way.”
Wendy Tibbs describes it as “executive functioning in disguise”—a way for students to learn how to plan, adapt, communicate, and take responsibility for outcomes. These aren’t just business skills. They’re life skills.
And when students discover them early, everything changes.
A Student’s Success Is a Teacher’s Legacy
Many BizWorld teachers stay in touch with their students for years. They’ve watched young learners become confident high schoolers, return as mentors, and even launch real businesses—some inspired directly by their class projects.
One standout moment came from Sherri Wright, whose students created a business called String Things that won a BizWorld demo competition and used the prize to launch an after-school Biz Club.
“It was all their idea,” Sherri shared. “I was just the supporter and advocate. They wanted to teach it. They loved it so much, they wanted to pass it on.”
Another long-time student of Wendy’s started in her fourth-grade BizWorld class and now owns her own salon.
“It all started with that first simulation,” Wendy said. “She’s running a real business now.”
That’s the power of a teacher: planting seeds in a child’s mind that grow into something far beyond the classroom. During Teacher Appreciation Week, we’re reminded that some lessons don’t end when the bell rings—and some legacies begin with a lesson plan.
A Curriculum That’s Built to Support Teachers—Not Add to Their Plate
BizWorld wasn’t created to be “one more thing” on a teacher’s to-do list. It was built to align with state standards, encourage cross-curricular learning, and adapt to students of all backgrounds, abilities, and learning styles.
Carolyn Tatem, who teaches in a multilingual, international school, praised the flexibility of the program and how well it integrates with Virginia’s 22 Workplace Readiness Skills.
“This isn’t just entrepreneurship—it’s everything from teamwork to banking vocabulary to interview prep,” she explained. “They’re learning skills they’ll use no matter what path they take.”
And with BizWorld Plus launching soon, educators like Wendy are shaping the next chapter—combining years of teacher insights into a flexible, modern version of the program that grows with every classroom.
Because when we listen to teachers, we make education better for everyone.
To the Teachers Who Make the Magic Happen: Thank You
This Teacher Appreciation Week, we’re not just celebrating educators—we’re celebrating the moments they make possible. The unexpected breakthroughs. The new beliefs students form about themselves. The ideas that spark confidence and curiosity.
To every teacher who’s ever handed a student a BizWorld workbook—or stood back while a kid stepped into the CEO role for the first time—we see you.
You are leaders. Mentors. Legacy builders.
Not all heroes wear capes.
Some carry lesson plans.
And some hand a kid a bracelet kit… and watch a business (and a student) come to life.