Public Schools, Private Billions
and the Best of Intentions
SEATTLE,
Washington (AP)
May 17, 2005
- Bill Gates raised some hackles with his
withering assessment of American high schools, but at least the billionaire
founder of Microsoft is putting his money where his mouth is.
The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has
invested $2.3 billion since 2000 in new visions of education, with smaller
schools and more personalized instruction to prepare young people for the
working world and post-high school learning.
The foundation has programs in 42 states
and the District of Columbia; it supports more than 1,500 high schools -- about
half totally new and the others redesigned. Its three scholarship programs,
designed to fill tuition gaps left by other grants and aid, have assisted more
than 10,000 students.
At one of its schools, the Truman Center in
Federal Way, about 20 miles south of Seattle, 12 teacher/advisers tend 208
students -- helping them figure out what they care about and how to pursue it.
Two days a week are set aside for job-shadowing and internships in the real
world.
Shawn Dube was going nowhere in 2001 when
he transferred to Truman, one of 16 schools in the state being transformed with
a five-year grant and scholarships from the Gates Foundation's Achiever program.
"It was kind of a last-resort thing that I
was there," recalls Dube, now 18.
An internship at an upscale local
restaurant put Dube on his path. He found a mentor, eagerly honed his skills and
is now a first-year student at the Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park,
New York. He plans a stint in France and dreams of a restaurant of his own.
Shawn's mom, Kim Dube, credits the Gates
program with giving Shawn the confidence to chase his dream and scholarships to
finance it.
"My husband and I didn't go to college,"
Kim says. "It just got him past that fear."
Since 2000, the education branch of the
Gates Foundation has been working to upgrade the nation's high schools, which
Gates characterized as "obsolete" in a February speech to the National Governors
Association.
Rigor, relevance, relationships
In that speech, he spelled out his "new
three R's" for building better high schools:
Rigor: Making sure all students are given a
challenging curriculum that prepares them for college or work.
Relevance: Making sure kids have courses
and projects that relate to their lives and their goals.
Relationships: Making sure kids have adults
who know them, look out for them, and push them to achieve.
"The idea is that every district should
have a rigorous academic alternative for kids who do not succeed in the
traditional high school setting," said Gates Foundation spokeswoman Marie Groark.
Such alternatives don't come cheap. And
with states struggling to pay for basic education and keep up federal
accountability requirements -- what happens when the five-year grants expire?
"If you don't get a commitment from the
school district to continue, it's just an exercise you go through," said Leon
Horne, a middle-school teacher and former union leader in Tacoma.
The foundation's intent with the grants is
to get the ball rolling by demonstrating alternatives that work, Groark said.
"Our goal for all our work is sustainability -- that we can disappear."
Followup and monitoring will be essential,
said Shirley Malcom, head of education and human resources at the American
Association for the Advancement of Science in Washington, D.C.
"The big question is the learning goals,"
Malcom said. "What is it we want these children to know? ... Are they going to
be job-ready, and are they going to be college-ready?"
New tests, mandated by federal law, are
designed to help assess student progress.
Innovation from the inside
The sustainability of the foundation's work
will depend on whether it fosters innovation from inside or tries to impose it
from outside, Malcom said. School districts will be more likely to support --
and help spread -- innovations developed within schools and communities.
That's a belief the foundation shares.
"When we give a grant, we give it because
the community wants it and asks for it," Groark said. "It's not the Gates
Foundation telling the community to do something. It's the Gates Foundation
supporting work that's already begun."
There's no question that most high schools
don't work, Malcom said. But the structure is very difficult to break down for
various reasons, including the often massive size of the buildings themselves.
Creating small schools, usually schools
within schools, has been a fundamental part of the foundation's approach.
The Truman Center, for example, has just
six classrooms -- crammed with projects, art, words of wisdom. "Quiet rooms" are
set aside for those who need to concentrate. The only doors are on the bathrooms
and to the outdoors.
"Our high schools were designed fifty years
ago to meet the needs of another age," Gates told the governors in February.
"Until we design them to meet the needs of
the 21st century, we will keep limiting -- even ruining -- the lives of millions
of Americans every year," said Gates, himself a product of the rigorous
standards and hands-on instruction at Seattle's private Lakeside School.
"Only one-third of our students graduate
from high school ready for college, work, and citizenship," he said. "The other
two-thirds, most of them low-income and minority students, are tracked into
courses that won't ever get them ready for college or prepare them for a
family-wage job, no matter how well the students learn or the teachers teach."
Hands-on approach
Despite his position atop one of the
world's biggest technology companies, high-tech education reforms have been a
small part of the foundation's work. Online schools are the subject of just two
grants, totaling less than $3 million.
The foundation's education wing has a staff
of about three dozen, eight or nine of whom monitor grant recipients.
At Truman, school officials write frequent
reports to keep the foundation up to date, and foundation officials make yearly
visits, said Principal Judy Kraft.
The foundation gets points from educators
and observers for its hands-on approach.
"Their staffers are engaged in ways other
funders are not engaged, in part because their staff comes from the education
field. They're not heavy-handed at all," says Patricia Sullivan at the Center
for Education Policy in Washington, D.C., which receives some funding from the
Gates Foundation.
That's not to say all goes smoothly on
foundation projects. In Tacoma, teacher Horne said, it took three years to work
out union concerns and get teachers set up for foundation programs at three of
the city's five high schools, a year longer than the usual training phase.
"I don't think they'd really thought the
whole thing through," said Horne, who suggested the program's test run in Tacoma
might have been more effectively conducted at a single school.
He also noted that the foundation's vision
-- of one teacher/adviser overseeing a small class throughout high school while
teaching most subjects -- seems to clash with the federal No Child Left Behind
law, which calls for teachers with high expertise in specific subjects.
Still, across Washington state, where the
foundation is based, it is generally acknowledged as a positive force, said
Charles Hasse, president of the teachers union, the Washington Education
Association.
Although teachers sometimes bristle at
guidance from outsiders, he said, "the people at the foundation are seen as
partners at improving education and essentially allies of classroom teachers."
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