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FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION:
Carol Rava
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
206-709-3230
Susan King
Carnegie Corporation of New York
212-207-6273
Jo-Ann Mort
Open Society Institute
212-548-0655
THREE
NATIONAL FOUNDATIONS LAUNCH
"NEW CENTURY HIGH SCHOOLS CONSORTIUM FOR NEW YORK CITY"
WITH NEW YORK CITY PUBLIC SCHOOLS
New
York, New York December 14, 2000. Three major foundations
have joined forces in an innovative partnership with New York Citys
public schools to redesign some of the citys large comprehensive
high schools that serve approximately 76,000 students across the
city. The New Century High Schools Consortium for New York City,
established by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Carnegie Corporation
of New York and the Open Society Institute (OSI), will make a five
year, $30 million investment that promises effective high schools
for all students and the implementation of small-school designs.
The partnership was launched today at the Julia Richman Education
Complex in Manhattan by foundation leaders, New York City Board
of Education chancellor Harold Levy and United Federation of Teachers
president Randi Weingarten, key partners in the consortium.
The consortium is targeting the lowest performing academic comprehensive
high schools that serve students from low income neighborhoods and
will back plans for both large-school redesign and development of
small schools. The consortium expects to choose approximately ten
large-scale high school redesigns and sponsor the creation of a
number of new secondary schools serving grades 7 through 12. To
be eligible for the grants, high schools will compete in a request
for proposal (RFP) process that will judge applicants on the strength
of their plans, their ability to create collaborations between teachers,
school administrators, parents and business leaders.
"Small-school designs have a proven track record of helping all
students achieve," says Patty Stonesifer, president and co-chair
of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. "A number of New York City
high schools have successfully implemented small-school models and
this partnership will help bring these innovations to scale by supporting
both new small high schools and the redesign of large high schools."
"All of us in this consortium recognize reforming and redesigning
urban high schools is a daunting challenge," says Vartan Gregorian,
president of Carnegie Corporation of New York. "After years of elementary
and middle school reforms its time to bring that energy to
high schools. With New York State now requiring high school graduates
to pass the Regents English exam and within a few years four others,
the countrys largest system cannot afford to be left behind
especially when there are such promising models that can make the
difference in students performance."
"Open Society Institute is pleased to join our partners in this
initiative because far too many failing high schools crush the aspirations
of poor students of color, and serve as conveyor belts for the criminal
justice system, not for the opportunity that is their birthright,"
said Gara LaMarche, director of U.S. Programs for OSI. "The good
news is that we know how to do better, and in this New York City
partnership, we will."
New York City educates more public school students than any other
urban district in America and more than a majority of the states.
The system includes 1,100,000 students; 267,000 of them attend high
school. About 60% of all students in the targeted city schools are
eligible for free or reduced price lunchÊan indication of economic
need.
"To work well, this consortium must create and support partnerships
that will shape and nurture schools that are characterized by personalization,
rich and rigorous curricula, effective teaching and learning, and
clear pathways to college, technical schools careers and community
participation," says Michele Cahill, senior program officer at Carnegie
Corporation of New York. "All of us in the consortium understand
that no other city has such a challenge of scale, but we also know
that no other city has such a strong base of assets of experience
and partnership on which to build systemic high school redesign."
New York City has experimented with a number of models for specific
high school designs that have been recognized nationally for their
innovation, results and targeted approach to teaching. (Attached
is a list of some of those school designs.)
"We have a number of high schools in our system that by any measure
are successes," says schools chancellor Harold Levy. "This commitment
by the foundations ensures that we can spread outÊcarry these ideas
and reforms deep into neighborhoods. And at this moment, when the
knowledge economy is demanding workers navigate the new economy,
the traditional high school cannot prepare students adequately.
We are in the midst of an education revolution and we welcome the
support from these foundations to invest in our city, in our students
and in our teachers. This is an investment with a huge payoff for
everyone involved."
Randi Weingarten, president of the teachers union, applauded the
New Century High Schools Consortium for New York City for emphasizing
the critical role teachers play in such reform. "Research shows
the involvement of an adult in a young persons life during
the school experience can be an all-important ingredient. Smaller
school design linked with curriculum reform will give teachers more
of an opportunity to make that difference."
The New Century High Schools Consortium for New York City will be
administered by New Visions, an education reform organization with
experience in small-school development and a proven track record
of partnership with the New York City school system. New Visions
will coordinate questions about the initiative and administer the
RFP process, which will begin in January. The proposal review process
will include leaders in all three foundations and a group of outside
advisors. Planning grants will be made in the summer of 2001.
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (http://www.gatesfoundation.org)
is dedicated to improving peoples lives by sharing advances
in health and learning with the global community. Major priorities
include expanding access to vaccines in developing countries, bringing
computers with Internet access to libraries throughout North America
and providing scholarships to academically talented minority students
in the U.S.
Carnegie Corporation of New York was begun by Andrew Carnegie in
1911 for the "advancement and diffusion of knowledge and understanding"
and has an endowment of $1.7 billion as of September 30, 1999. The
Corporation expects to issue grants of $75 million in the next year
in the areas of education, international peace and security, international
development and Special Projects: Civic Engagement for the 21st
Century.
The Open Society Institute US Programs (http://www.soros.org)
encourages debates in areas where one view of an issue dominates
all others. Among the education programs funded by OSI are a series
of youth initiatives, including Urban Debate Program, which seeks
to support the institutionalization of competitive high school debate
in inner city school districts in New York City and around the country,
and a national youth media program. OSI also funds the largest after-school
program in New York City. OSI US Programs is part of a network of
foundations in nearly 40 countries, created and funded by George
Soros.
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