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Frederick M. Hess's BlogThe Big Philanthropic Shift: Now What?
by Frederick M. Hess • May 7, 2012 at 8:43 am http://www.frederickhess.org/2012/05/the-big-philanthropic-shift-now-what I recently wrote a piece for Phi Delta Kappan exploring a couple of the key developments in edu-giving since 2005. That's the year I published With the Best of Intentions: How Philanthropy is Reshaping K-12 Education, in which I (in my usual mean-spirited fashion) used the dismal experience of the then-recently concluded $1.1 billion Annenberg Challenge as a jumping-off point. Today, a lot has changed. Back in 2005, Gates Foundation officials were, for the first time, seriously considering whether to play an active role in shaping public policy. Race to the Top, the Common Core, Democrats for Education Reform, and StudentsFirst were unimagined. No one would seriously suggest New Orleans, Washington, D.C., or Newark as hotbeds of school reform. Diane Ravitch was still a champion of school choice and accountability, and few had heard of Michelle Rhee, Deborah Gist, Jon Schnur, or Geoffrey Canada. No Child Left Behind was still novel and fairly popular, and not a single state was trying to build teacher evaluation around value-added systems. Today, the world looks real different. These developments all (for better and worse) owe something to policy-oriented giving. "New sector" philanthropy has helped shift the school reform landscape. For a quick glimpse of what's happened, just compare the biggest givers in 2010 and those a decade before. According to the Foundation Center, the five biggest K-12 givers in 2010 were: Back in 2000, the Foundation Center reported that they were: While the Gates Foundation has remained the biggest player over the past decade, the Walton Foundation has substantially upped its investment. Meanwhile, once-influential entities like Annenberg and Ford have declined in import. All this has profound implications for the way we view education philanthropy. As I write in PDK: A decade ago, a big frustration for edu-philanthropists was the sense that they would invest in exciting programs or practices, but that these never seemed to deliver lasting improvement. A piloted reading or mentoring program would offer promising results, only to disappoint when scaled. Or a foundation would underwrite professional development or a new curriculum for several years, only to see it die on the vine when outside funding dried up. Or funders would help launch dynamic schools, only to see them fall apart when the charismatic founder left. Back in 2005, I heartily endorsed the policy-centric approach that the contributors had encouraged. I continue to do so today. And I think the results speak to the potential impact of this tack. At the same time, I've long wrestled with the repercussions. I've worried about foundations being wedded to reformers who tell them what they want to hear, the perils of groupthink, and the disinclination of critics to challenge deep-pocketed funders. And I've worried how all of this gets even dicier when foundations are linking arms with the federal government. I've no easy answers, other than the surety that these are questions we need to talk about and openly discuss more frequently, more productively, and with less hostility than has been the norm. receive the latest by email: subscribe to frederick m. hess's free mailing list |
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