| Contact:
Marie
Groark
Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation
Phone: 206.709.3400
E-mail: marieg@gatesfoundation.org
Betsy
Bergstein
For Meyer Memorial Trust
Phone: 503.241.8383
E-Mail: BetsyB313@aol.com
PORTLAND
-- " The Meyer
Memorial Trust and the Bill &
Melinda Gates Foundation today
announced a $25 million investment
to start new small high schools
and transform large ones across
Oregon. The Oregon Small
Schools Initiative is intended to
address the state's
growing achievement gap and better
prepare students in selected
communities throughout the state
for the demands of today's
economy. The focus of the effort
will be on communities and schools
with significant populations of
low-income and minority students.
"In
our economy, education equals
opportunity,"
said Tom Vander Ark,
executive director of education at
the Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation. "Young people who
attend smaller schools that
provide a rigorous, personalized
education and enable close
relationships with adults are more
likely to graduate and continue
their education."
The
initiative will create 10 to 12
new small high schools and
transform 18 to 20 existing large
ones into smaller schools. The
Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation will invest $15 million
in the effort, and the Meyer
Memorial Trust will commit $10
million. A nonprofit organization,
E3: Employers for Education
Excellence will lead the five-year
initiative. The program will
provide the funding, training and
in-depth technical support to
school communities committed to
creating smaller, more effective
high schools.
"Smaller
is smarter,"
said Doug Stamm, Executive
Director for the Meyer Memorial
Trust.
"It is important for
us to provide the means for
students to do their best and to
make learning a priority in their
lives. This program helps those
students that are discouraged or
unmotivated in traditional
classroom settings to make
learning their passion and stay in
school."
In
recent years, Oregon students have
made significant improvements at
the lower grades, but improving
high school achievement has proven
to be particularly challenging.
Across the state, nearly one-third
of Oregon students drop out before
graduation. More troubling, nearly
one out of every two of Oregon's
African-American and Hispanic
students do not graduate from high
school.
Many
experts say large, impersonal high
schools, with their anonymity and
lack of rigor, are the biggest
obstacle to personalizing
education so all students can
succeed. This grant will transform
some of Oregon's
ineffective schools into smaller
results-oriented learning
communities.
Dozens
of studies have shown that
students in smaller high schools
graduate and go on to college at a
higher rate than their
counterparts in large high
schools. In small schools, they
get rigorous, engaging courses and
the opportunity to develop close
relationships with their teachers
and other adults.
This
initiative builds on the Bill
& Melinda Gates Foundation's
nationwide effort to improve the
graduation and college-going
rates, particularly among African
Americans and Hispanics, by
strengthening high schools. The
foundation has partnered with
outstanding community based
organizations and school districts
throughout the country.
Many
Oregon education leaders and
organizations have endorsed the
Oregon Small Schools Initiative,
including the Oregon Department of
Education, the Confederation of
Oregon Schools Administrators, the
Oregon Schools Boards Association
and the Oregon Education
Association (OEA).
Oregon's
Superintendent of Public
Instruction Susan Castillo is
enthusiastic about the program's
potential to lower the dropout
rate among African-American and
Hispanic Students. "I
have created an advisory group to
help me focus on improving
achievement for underrepresented
and minority students," said
Castillo. "This Gates
and Meyer Memorial Trust program
will help Oregon reach the goals
we will set for our schools and
our students."
"Educators
in the classroom understand, all
too well, that underserved
students can benefit from smaller
and innovative learning and
teaching,"
said OEA President Kris
Kain. "We
know much about learning is about
building relationships with our
students and this program supports
that."
In
the summer, communities throughout
Oregon will receive detailed
information about how to apply for
participation in the Initiative
according to E3 executive director
René Léger. Selected school
communities will be invited to
apply for multi-year
implementation grants that will be
awarded in spring 2004.
The
grant builds in measurements of
success, including student
achievement, college readiness,
attendance and graduation rates
and the number of students who go
on to higher education.
The
Meyer Memorial Trust was created
by the late Fred G. Meyer, who
built the chain of retail stores
bearing his name throughout the
Pacific Northwest. When Mr. Meyer
died in 1978 at the age of 92, his
will established the Trust, which
began operating in 1982. In April
1990 the Fred Meyer Charitable
Trust changed its name to Meyer
Memorial Trust in order to
emphasize that it is a private,
independent foundation
representing Mr. Meyer's personal
philanthropy. The Meyer Memorial
Trust has invested over $75
million in education over the last
21 years.
E3:
Employers for Education Excellence
was founded in 1996 by the Oregon
Business Council. E3 works
in partnership with business,
education and civic leaders
statewide to advance student
learning and achievement in Oregon's
public schools. E3 is a 503
(c) 3 nonprofit organization.
On
the Internet:
www.gatesfoundation.org/education/default.htm
www.mmt.org
www.e3oregon.org
(Information for school
communities wanting to participate
in the initiative.)
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