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鈥攖hen the largest private donation ever made to public education鈥攚as announced in December 1993 by Walter H. Annenberg, the publishing magnate who owned TV Guide, served as U.S. ambassador to Britain from 1969 to 1974, and had close friendships with Presidents Richard M. Nixon and Ronald Reagan.
Mr. Annenberg, who in 1989 had established the Annenberg Foundation with $1.2 billion in assets, explained that he made his historic commitment to school reform because he was concerned about rising violence among young people. 鈥淲e must ask ourselves whether improving education will halt the violence,鈥 he said at a White House ceremony with President Bill Clinton.
The idea behind the $500 million Annenberg Challenge was to require recipients to raise matching money from other sources, on the theory that the fundraising efforts would mobilize communities in support of their schools.
As 澳门跑狗论坛 put it in 1997: 鈥淎 central assumption was that by giving money to reformers on the ground, rather than to the school bureaucracy, the challenge could make public education work for poor and minority students and deepen existing grassroots efforts.鈥
But in doing so, the projects struggled to influence the larger educational system, the article noted.
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Common themes across all of the Annenberg Challenge sites were the importance of smaller, more personalized schools and classrooms; high expectations for all children; and strong ties between schools and between schools and their surrounding communities.
In all, the foundation spent $385 million on 18 reform efforts, including grants to national organizations representing rural schools and promoting arts education. The challenge provided grants to nine urban areas: Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Houston, Los Angeles, New York City, Philadelphia, the San Francisco Bay Area, and South Florida. By 2002, most of the projects were winding down. Mr. Annenberg died in October of that year.
Mixed Results
New York City鈥檚 project is widely considered the most successful of the urban initiatives undertaken with the challenge money, since it spurred a movement to create smaller schools that still has momentum today. The projects in Boston and in the Bay Area, which focused on teacher knowledge, were the only urban projects to receive second, five-year grants from the foundation.
Other sites weren鈥檛 as successful, including Detroit, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, and South Florida.
At the time, the Chicago Annenberg Challenge was lauded for giving birth to the Chicago Public Education Fund, which has continued to be a convening place for civic leaders to get involved in schools.
The Chicago initiative has received fresh attention during the 2008 presidential campaign because it was chaired by Democratic nominee Barack Obama, then a young lawyer. (鈥淏ackers Say Chicago Project Not 鈥楻adical鈥,鈥 Oct. 15, 2008.)
Half of the first $100 million spent under the challenge went to endow the Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, which had been formed in 1993 with a $5 million anonymous gift. The institute was then chaired by Theodore R. Sizer, the founder of the Coalition of Essential Schools and one of the nation鈥檚 most prominent education thinkers.
Today, the institute focuses on how to create 鈥渟mart education systems鈥 in urban areas鈥攁 distinct shift from the school-by-school approach for which Mr. Sizer was known and which was pursued by most of the challenge sites.
Marla Ucelli Kashyap, the director of district redesign at the institute, chairs the board of trustees of 澳门跑狗论坛, the nonprofit corporation that publishes 澳门跑狗论坛.
Vartan Gregorian, the president of Brown at the time of Mr. Annenberg鈥檚 gift, consulted closely with Annenberg Foundation officials on how to distribute the remaining challenge money.
In August, in response to questions about Sen. Obama鈥檚 ties to William C. Ayers, a professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago and one of the founders of the Chicago Annenberg Challenge, the foundation and the institute opened their records on the Chicago project.
In a news release, the foundation noted that sites participating in the national Annenberg Challenge were locally governed and controlled, and that the cac had no record of providing any salary for Mr. Ayers, whose past as a leader of the radical Weather Underground has stirred controversy in the presidential race.
鈥榃ise and Appropriate鈥
The Annenberg Foundation鈥檚 Web site contains links to documents related to the Chicago project, including a Nov. 18, 1994, letter from Mr. Gregorian to Mr. Ayers and Anne C. Hallett, who described herself in another piece of correspondence as 鈥渏oined at the hip鈥 with Mr. Ayers in putting together a plan to secure Annenberg funding.
Mr. Gregorian鈥檚 letter describes their plans as 鈥渁mbitious and exciting鈥 and 鈥渨ise and appropriate.鈥 It concludes: 鈥淵our dedication to the children of Chicago deserves hearty applause.鈥
Mr. Gregorian, who is now the president of the Carnegie Corporation of New York, deferred to Gail C. Levin, the executive director of the Annenberg Foundation, for comment.
(The Annenberg Foundation, based in Radnor, Pa., supports coverage in 澳门跑狗论坛 of new arrangements in public education and classroom improvement strategies. The newspaper also receives support from the Carnegie Corporation for coverage of pathways to college and the workplace.)
Ms. Levin said that Mr. Ayers鈥 involvement was not an issue for the foundation, and that commentators are giving him an 鈥渙utsized role鈥 in the project.
鈥淭he lessons learned from the excellent evaluation work that was done were useful and instructive in determining the future work,鈥 she said. 鈥淐hicago has made great headway in the years since. I think a measure of that was due to the inaugural investments of the Annenberg Challenge.鈥