The new philanthropists: can their millions enhance learning?
Colvin, Richard Lee
Last February, in a speech in Washington, D.C. that drew 45 of the
nation's governors as well as a hefty sample of the nation's
education policy elite, Microsoft chairman Bill Gates issued a jeremiad on the state of the American high school, arguing that this venerable
institution is obsolete and a threat to the nation's economic and
political well-being. Declarations that public education in general and
high schools in particular turn out badly prepared graduates, perpetuate
inequities, and generally operate in ways that run counter to the
nation's interests have become almost commonplace. But coming from
Gates, whose prodigious wealth and aggressive tactics have become one of
the nation's best-known narratives of entrepreneurship, the words
took on new meaning. Stories in the New York Times, Los Angeles Times,
Washington Post, and many other newspapers, most written not by
education reporters but by Washington-based political and legislative
correspondents, reported Gates's assertions in an unquestioning,
almost awestruck tone that made one thing clear: if high schools are bad
enough for Bill Gates to declare them a disaster, then it must be so.
It was publicity that even the world's richest man could not
buy.
But Gates's standing to speak authoritatively on the issue
rested on more than his wealth, celebrity, and business acumen, or even
his company's need to hire well-trained workers. Through the
efforts of his richly endowed Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Gates
has become an unparalleled force who is not only sounding the alarm
about America's high schools, but is also putting forth, and
financing, a range of specific solutions. Since 2002, the Gates
Foundation has allocated more than $1.2 billion toward creating about
820 new high schools and breaking down about 750 large, comprehensive
high schools into smaller, more focused, more intimate academies that
aim to send far more students off to college prepared to succeed. The
foundation is also the lead partner in a $125 million experiment in
"early college" high schools, which are designed to enable 9th
graders to get their high-school diplomas as well as two years of
college credit, all within four or five years. To increase the impact of
its initiatives, the Gates Foundation has involved 13 other foundations
and is working with more than one hundred intermediary organizations in
two hundred cities located in almost every state. The foundation's
goal is ambitious: to improve the national graduation rate to at least
80 percent, from about 65 percent, while increasing the likelihood that
all high-school graduates are college-ready. So, more spending, in more
places, is likely on the way.
The Money Pours In
American philanthropy, by local and national foundations,
corporations, and wealthy individuals, has played many important roles
in K-12 education: creating new schools, underwriting research, funding
scholarships, testing hypotheses, generating new curricula, invoking
ideals, setting agendas, bolstering training, and building a case for
policy changes. Foundation money is so widespread, and so sought after,
that few in education are unaffected. Indeed, institutions with which
both this author and this journal are affiliated receive support from
several foundations mentioned here.
Nothing about this is new. Thousands of schools for African
American students across the Jim Crow South were built with the backing
of the Rosenwald Fund, one of the earliest and most important
foundations in education; philanthropist Grace Dodge founded Teachers
College, now at Columbia University, in 1887, which led to training of
teachers in pedagogy; the Ford Foundation was involved in promoting the
employment of classroom aides, National Merit Scholarships, and the
development of Advanced Placement curricula and tests; the National
Board of Professional Teaching Standards grew out of work funded by
Carnegie Corporation of New York, which also funded the Educational
Testing Service to develop objective ways of measuring academic merit,
which led to the SAT. More recently, Ford and the Rockefeller Foundation supported the work that led to equity lawsuits, dramatically altering
how schools are funded in many states. Even if the $1.5 billion that
philanthropists spend on K-12 education is paltry compared with the $450
billion annual price tag for the system as a whole, all of these are
examples of the huge impact that well-placed philanthropy dollars can
have (see Figure 1).
Even though some foundations have reduced their involvement in K-12
education or shifted their education investment to prekindergarten or
afterschool programs, far more philanthropists are entering the scene
than are leaving, says Bill Porter, executive director of Grantmakers
for Education.
Indeed, according to the Future of Philanthropy project, an
analysis done by a Cambridge, Massachusetts, consulting group, the
number of foundations involved in education is expected to swell. Over
the next two decades, Americans will pass on to their heirs huge sums,
approximately $1.7 trillion of which will go to charities and to endow
foundations. And, typically, about 25 percent of philanthropic dollars
goes to education, although more goes to higher education than to
elementary and secondary schools. Gates, just to use one example, has a
personal net worth estimated by Forbes magazine to be $46 billion, and
he has vowed to give away 95 percent of his assets during his lifetime.
The New Philanthropists
Plenty of other heavyweights in the world of business are
contributing heavily to education causes already. They include Jim
Barksdale, the former chief operating officer of Netscape, who gave $100
million to establish an institute to improve reading instruction in
Mississippi; Eli Broad, the home builder and retirement investment
titan, whose foundation works on a range of management, governance, and
leadership issues; Michael Dell, the founder of Dell Computers, whose
family foundation is valued at $1.2 billion and is a major supporter of
a program that boosts college going among students of potential but
middling accomplishment; financier and buyout specialist Theodore J.
Forstmann, who gave $50 million of his own money to help poor kids
attend private schools; David Packard, a former classics professor who
also is a scion of one of the founders of Hewlett-Packard and has given
$75 million to help California school districts improve reading
instruction; and the Walton Family Foundation, which benefits from the
fortune of the founder of Wal-Mart, and which is the nation's
largest supporter of charter schools and private school scholarships
(see "A Tribute to John Walton," p. 5).
As is clear from this partial list, many of the newcomers are in
the West, or otherwise far from the old-money power centers of the East.
A number of the individual donors did not come from money, but attended
public schools before amassing their fortunes. As a group, they share a
belief that public education has not done well by immigrants or poor
students, hardly a radical claim. But they are less likely than were
donors in the past to think that the solution to that problem lies
solely or even primarily in spending more money or even in making the
allocation of resources more equitable, which has been a common thread
in work that many better-established foundations have pursued.
The San Francisco-based Pisces Foundation, for example, was endowed
by Donald Fisher, founder and chairman emeritus of the Gap clothing
chain, and his wife, Doris. By 2005 Pisces was the biggest single
supporter of Teach for America, a nonprofit that has, improbably, made
teaching in poverty-ridden urban schools one of the most popular career
choices of students at Ivy League colleges. Pisces also gave about $35
million to fund the national expansion of the instructionally demanding
Knowledge Is Power Program charter schools, which serve mostly
low-income students. Overall, the foundation is spending about $20
million a year to "leverage change in public education--especially
in schools serving disadvantaged students--through large strategic
investments in a small number of initiatives that bolster student
achievement." That rate of spending was about the same as that of
the venerable Carnegie Corporation and would have put the foundation in
the top ten or so givers to K-12 in 2002. (See Table 1).
Like Fisher, other new philanthropists tend to believe that
schools, in addition to securing adequate financial resources, need to
embrace accountability and to overhaul basic functions. Many are
personally involved in overseeing the grants they give and they insist
on results from educators and schools. They believe good leadership,
effective management, compensation based on performance, competition,
the targeting of resources, and accountability for results can all pay
dividends for education as well as for foundations. They tend to set
ambitious goals for their own work and to be aggressive in pursuit of
their agendas. That, too, is something of a departure for
philanthropists, who have tended to stay in the background and let their
grantees set their own goals while they bask in the spotlight.
"These are people who made money challenging the status
quo," says Barry Munitz, president and CEO of the J. Paul Getty
Trust, referring to the new givers. "These high net worth,
first-generation folks ... approach their gift-giving the way they
approached their investing--due diligence, measures of accountability, a
lot of involvement, each with an agenda. It's very different from
spending money on the system and standing back and letting it
work."
But it's not always easy for foundations to manage the
tradeoffs between aggressively pushing school districts in a certain
direction and respecting the wishes of a community and its leadership;
between demanding quick results and acknowledging the complexity of
school reform and the intransigence of bureaucracies; between investing
in something new and injecting operating resources into a project
already under way. In thinking about these dilemmas, many in the
philanthropic world continue to cite the 1993 Annenberg Challenge as an
example of what they want to avoid.
The $500 million challenge issued by former ambassador and
publishing mogul Walter Annenberg is still the largest philanthropic
gift ever given to American public education. After being matched by
more than $600 million in goods and services from the local communities
that were recipients, the money was given to nine large city school
systems, a consortium of rural schools, and two national school-reform
groups, among others. In some ways, the amount of money involved was
both too much and too little. Some have said the money was doled out with far too little oversight by the foundation. But others contend
that, in the foundation's effort to affect a number of communities,
its impact was diluted.
"We spread ourselves too thin," remarked Harold Williams,
president emeritus of the J. Paul Getty Trust and a board member of the
Los Angeles organization that was spawned by the Annenberg grant.
"If we had taken on fewer school families and focused our dollars
and human resources on those, we would have accomplished more."
Guilbert C. Hentschke, dean of the school of education at the
University of Southern California, one of the main partners in the
challenge, is now studying the impact of philanthropy on education. He
says that the Annenberg grant met "the classic definition of a
professional reform," meaning that it mostly paid for more of what
already was going on in the schools. For the most part, he says,
"The school districts and the schools gobbled up those grants like
lunch, and they were ready for the next one." What may have been
needed instead, Hentschke says, was a "radical" reform that
started with an empty slate and redesigned the most basic operations of
the schools. Many of the leading donors today are trying to figure out
how to do just that.
High Schools
The Gates Foundation has attempted some of that reimagining with
its high-school initiative, which brought together other philanthropies,
including Carnegie, the Open Society Institute, Annenberg, the W.K.
Kellogg Foundation, Walton, and Ford, Carnegie alone has put in $60
million for its Schools for a New Society high-school redesign effort,
which aims to overhaul all the high schools in a district.
"We're not ideological about attacking the problem," says
Tom Vander Ark, who is in charge of the Gates Foundation's
education work. "We're trying to attack it in many different
ways."
Gates Foundation officials are also aware that, unless public money
takes over when private money goes away, the innovative approaches the
foundation is fostering will disappear with little impact. "In the
narrowest sense, it's a $10 billion to $20 billion problem that
we're attacking, and over time we might contribute a tenth of the
solutions it will require," Vander Ark says. "It would be
difficult, impractical, expensive, and ineffective for us to do this
work ourselves."
Leadership, Management, and Governance
By the end of 2004, the education foundation established by Eli
Broad and his wife, Edythe, had assets worth $540 million. The
foundation has already committed some $135 million to overhauling
fundamental aspects of urban school districts: identifying new sources
of talent for positions of authority; developing alternative training
methods for managers, principals, and teachers union leaders; creating
new tools for analyzing performance data; and working with school boards
to help those sometimes obstructionist bodies become more focused on
student learning than on petty power plays. Broad, whose fortune is
variously estimated at between $4 billion and $6 billion, is in his 70s,
and he too plans on giving away most of that amount during his lifetime.
Most of it will go toward K-12 education causes, according to Dan
Katzir, the education foundation's managing director.
The foundation supports a number of what Katzir calls "branded
flagship initiatives," such as the Broad Center for the Management
of School Systems or the Broad Institute for School Boards. Its largest
investment is a $20 million-plus stake in SchoolMatters.com, a project
of Standard & Poor's School Evaluation Services unit that
marries information about how schools spend their money with academic
indicators.
Another major foundation that has invested heavily--even more so
than Broad--in improving the skills of principals and superintendents is
the Wallace Foundation, which was established by DeWitt and Lila Acheson
Wallace, the founders of the Reader's Digest Association. In 2000
the foundation committed $150 million over five years to improving
leadership at the school and district level and is now underwriting in
24 states a wide variety of programs: leadership academies,
university-school district partnerships, research, changes in what it
takes to become certified as a principal, and superintendent training.
Wallace and Broad, as well as Annenberg and Gates, also are underwriting
the New York City Leadership Academy, a very expensive undertaking that
pays aspiring principals full salaries as they train for a year to take
jobs heading up schools in the city.
The Wallace Foundation's Richard Laine emphasizes that it is
not enough just to improve the training of principals. Put a
well-trained leader in a bad system, he's fond of saying, and
"The system will win every time." What's needed, he says,
are policy changes, giving the best teachers incentives to go into the
most demanding schools and allowing principals to have more control over
hiring and evaluating teachers and more flexibility and control over
their budgets.
Teaching
Improving teaching has long been high on the agenda of many
foundations. "It really all boils down to good teaching," says
Janice Petrovich of the Ford Foundation. "If you can figure out how
to do that, you'll make a difference."
That, however, turns out to be difficult for foundations to do well
and even more difficult to sustain. Foundations actively working on this
front today have a wide variety of strategies for making a difference.
Some of these might be categorized as efforts to build the capacity of
the current system by simply paying for professional development
sessions on particular topics; others might be thought of as attempts to
change the system by developing new approaches to hiring, compensating,
and evaluating teachers. Ultimately, Petrovich says, increasing the
capacity of the system changes the system. But foundations often are
reluctant to work inside classrooms to help teachers, for fear that they
won't have a systemic impact; at the same time, to make a
difference broadly, foundations have to fund projects over which they
have little control.
One of the most ambitious efforts to improve teaching is called
Teachers for a New Era, a $65 million project underwritten by four
venerable foundations: Carnegie, which initiated the effort and has the
largest stake; Annenberg; Ford; and the Rockefeller Foundation. As of
2003, 11 education schools had received five-year grants to develop
teacher-preparation programs that mimic the kind of clinical training
that doctors receive as residents and that pay more explicit attention
to the effect of the training on student learning. The grants must be
matched locally.
The Milken Family Foundation has spent well over $100 million to
make teaching more attractive by recognizing achievement and pushing
districts to base pay on performance. The foundation's Teacher
Advancement Program, which provides training opportunities to help
teachers climb a career ladder toward higher salaries based on their
performance, is now in place in 85 schools and is poised for a major
expansion, with states and the federal government offering financial
support.
"We are hell-bent on figuring out a way of creating the proper
incentives and putting them into practice to attract talented people
into the profession," Lowell Milken says.
Another foundation committed to improving teaching is the William
and Flora Hewlett Foundation, where Marshall Smith, a former acting
deputy secretary of education in the Clinton administration, heads up
education reforms. The former dean of the Stanford University School of
Education, Smith is perhaps the leading proponent of what's known
as "systemic" reform in education. He says that about half of
the $36 million or so he has to spend on K-12 education annually goes to
"trying to figure out ways of improving instruction in inner-city
schools."
Academic content and performance standards are now well ingrained
in American public education, Smith believes. But the standards movement
that he had a hand in launching "really doesn't touch the
classroom in a deep way. What's arisen in the past five or six
years as an issue is the quality of the teacher and whether we have the
capacity and smarts and knowledge to improve that."
School Choice
During the past decade, the nation's foundations have become
major champions of school choice, supporting the development of charter
schools and, to a lesser extent, the financing of vouchers to pay for
private school tuition for low-income students. Indeed, it seems that
many of the major foundations involved in education are backing charter
schools in one way or another, either by supporting individual sites or
by financing research or advocacy designed to promote policies friendly
to charters.
Broad has nine separate school-choice initiatives. A significant
number of the high schools Gates is supporting are charter schools. The
Annenberg Foundation gave more than $10 million to underwrite an
architecturally daring building for the Accelerated School, a highly
successful charter school south of downtown Los Angeles. Financier
Theodore J. Forstmann, along with the late John Walton (see
"Tribute," p. 5) each gave $50 million to start the
Children's Scholarship Fund, which subsidizes private school
tuition for low-income students. In 2001, according to the Foundation
Center, the Fund was the ninth-largest recipient of charitable donations
in the area of K-12 education, and in 2002 it was the top recipient.
Forstmann and Walton helped raise another $70 million for scholarships
from donors that included Broad, former Hollywood super agent Michael
Ovitz, and supermarket mogul Ronald W. Burkle.
Since 1998 the Walton Family Foundation started by Sam and Helen
Walton, the founders of Wal-Mart, has given an estimated $284 million to
K-12 education, the bulk of that to support charter schools and private
school scholarships for low-income students. The foundation is by far
the biggest donor to school choice-related causes and has helped
support, by one estimate, 10 percent of all the nation's charter
schools. "Our theory is that competition in a high enough degree
will eventually create competitive pressures to encourage the existing
systems to really try and compete," says Buddy Philpott, the
foundation's executive director.
Can Philanthropy Make a Difference?
It is often difficult to tell whether a foundation is making a
difference. Outside of evaluations paid for by the foundations
themselves or even done internally, philanthropy often receives little
scrutiny, and philanthropists are often treated like celebrities.
Frederick M. Hess, an editor of this journal, analyzed press coverage of
leading philanthropies involved in education for the publication
Philanthropy. He concluded that journalists rarely criticize foundations
on substantive issues and are far more likely to laud them than to
question their strategy or their impact.
Were journalists or others to attempt it, though, it is probably
easier now than in the past to determine the impact of philanthropy.
That's because, in response to the national push for academic
standards and accountability, movements fueled by philanthropy, states
now are required to test students and report on the results. When the
Annenberg Challenge was being evaluated, for example, the use of test
scores as one measure of the grant's effectiveness met resistance
in many cities where it operated. Today, it is expected that changes in
test scores will be factored into the evaluations of interventions.
But some worry that demanding rapid test-score gains from
foundation-backed reforms could lead to the abandonment of promising
practices before they have a chance to prove themselves. That is why
foundations such as Gates and Broad and others are trying to be
strategic in the degree to which they rely on test scores as indicators
of progress and are also monitoring a number of other changes including
graduation rates, attendance, and qualitative changes.
Needless to say, there is a rich history of success and failure to
learn from. In 1972 the Ford Foundation published a remarkably frank
critique of its own education reform efforts during the 1960s. Called
"A Foundation Goes to School" and written by Ed Meade,
Ford's longtime education program officer, the report observed that
the projects the foundation supported "underestimated the
complexity of improving schools" and did not fully account for the
difficulty of working with unions, community leaders and parents, or the
effect of broader social conditions. Foundations can't impose their
view of how the district should operate, in what Marshall Smith calls a
"mega-reform."
The challenge for foundations, then, is not to create the
initiative that will work precisely as planned. The challenge is to use
a variety of strategies--investment, capacity building, the creation of
competition, parallel structures that challenge the status quo--to help
the schools and districts themselves do a better job.
Tom Payzant, the veteran superintendent who heads up Boston Public
Schools, says large school districts get funding from a variety of
philanthropic organizations, but he has had to work hard to persuade
these funders to align their efforts to support a system-wide vision of
how to improve education and avoid contributing to what he calls
"project-itis," which is just a series of ad hoc donations
that make givers feel good but have little impact on students.
"It's been very hard for educators to stand up and say,
'I don't want the money unless it's aligned with what
we're doing,' without being snooty about it," he says.
Lowell Milken says that one way to judge the work of foundations is
whether other givers get on board and whether a project changes the way
the district does business. "Is the district willing to adjust its
budget and, if a project meets its goals, will they take on the whole
cost? All those issues are critical to us, in looking at how we should
proceed."
Despite the sometimes gloomy assessments of philanthropy's
impact, there is reason for hope. Giving to K-12 education will surely
increase. Foundations are working together much more than in the past.
They seem to recognize that public policy has to change if their
projects are to be sustained, and foundations are becoming more active
in the policy arenas. The philanthropists are funding outside
evaluations, and they seem to be more transparent and forthright about
the shortcomings of what they're funding as well as their
successes. Vander Ark of the Gates Foundation openly acknowledges that
10-20 percent of the foundation's grants are not working, and
another 10-20 percent are working out differently than planned. If it
were otherwise, he says, one would suspect that the foundation was only
placing safe bets, and safe bets are unlikely to produce the major
improvements that are needed in education.
Richard Lee Colvin is director of the Hechinger Institute on
Education and the Media, based at Teachers College, Columbia University.
This article is adapted from a chapter in the forthcoming book The Best
of Intentions: How Philanthropy Is Reshaping the Landscape of K-12
Education.
A Grain of Salt (Figure 1)
Even if philanthropic foundations allocate their funds effectively, it
remains unclear whether reform in the multibillion-dollar public-
education enterprise can be achieved with annual philanthropic
expenditures of $1.5 billion.
Philanthropic and Government Spending on Education
Billions of Dollars (2002)
Philanthropic spending 1.5
Federal, state, and local expenditures 435
SOURCE: U.S. Census Bureau; Jay Greene, "Buckets into the Sea: Why
Philanthropy Isn't Changing Schools, and How It Could," prepared for
American Enterprise Institute conference, "With the Best of Intentions:
Lessons Learned in K-12 Education Philanthropy," April 25, 2005,
Washington, D.C.
Note: Table made from bar graph.
Smart Money? (Table 1)
Of the 15 foundations that gave the most, a majority of their giving
constituted little more than donations to the current public education
system (lower-leverage). But $235 million was spent on higher-leverage
efforts to alter the public school system through major interventions
such as small schools, charter schools, and vouchers.
Millions of dollars, 2002
Higher Lower
Foundation leverage leverage Total
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation 111 135 246
Walton Family Foundation 68 10 78
Annenberg Foundation 9 31 40
Carnegie Corporation of New York 6 19 25
Lilly Endowment 5 18 23
New York Community Trust 8 13 21
Ford Foundation 4 17 21
W. K. Kellogg Foundation 7 14 21
William and Flora Hewlett 6 13 19
Foundation
Oberkotter Foundation 0 18 18
MBNA Foundation 2 14 16
Danforth Foundation 0 15 15
Pew Charitable Trusts 9 6 15
Goizueta Foundation 0 13 13
Total 235 336 571
SOURCE: Jay Greene, "Buckets into the Sea: Why Philanthropy Isn't
Changing Schools, and How It Could"