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SEVEN
NEW SCHOOLS OF EDUCATION SELECTED BY CARNEGIE CORPORATION OF NEW
YORK FOR MULTI-MILLION DOLLAR GRANTS
A
TOTAL OF ELEVEN HIGHER EDUCATION INSTITUTIONS
PART OF THIS NATIONAL TEACHERS FOR A NEW ERA INITIATIVE
PARTNERSHIP
WITH ANNENBERG, FORD AND ROCKEFELLER FOUNDATIONS PUMPS MORE THAN
$65 MILLION INTO REFORMING TEACHER PREPARATION
New
York, N.Y.July 14, 2003. Seven institutions of higher
learningranging from research universities to state institutions
to historically Black collegesare among those with schools
of education chosen to be designated Teachers for a New Era
schools following their recommendation by a prestigious national
advisory panel and approval by the Board of Trustees of Carnegie
Corporation of New York. Each school will receive a multi-million-dollar
grant over five years, which the institution must match, to reform
and reinvigorate its teacher education program in line with the
three design principles of Teachers for a New Era initiative.
The
seven institutions announced in this second round of competition
join four others announced in 2002. This landmark initiative to
strengthen K-12 teaching by developing state-of-the art schools
of education, which are focused on evidence-driven teacher education
programs, is expected to directly influence public policy leaders
concerned with the quality of the nations teachers.
This year, Boston College; Florida A&M University; the University
of Connecticut; Stanford University; the University of Texas at
El Paso; the University of Washington; and the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
were chosen to participate in Teachers for a New Era in recognition
of the capability of their teacher preparation programs and the
university-wide commitment to the initiative. The grants will be
dispersed over 2003 and 2004. These seven institutions join four
others chosen in 2002: Bank Street College of Education in New York
City; California State University, Northridge; Michigan State University;
and the University of Virginia.
Thanks
to the support of the Annenberg and Ford foundations which are collaborating
directly with the Corporation on this teacher education reform movement,
there are now eleven institutions of higher education that education
policymakers involved in setting the nations agenda can turn
to for research, practice and results about how to prepare teachers.
We think these schoolsin timecan make a difference in
how teachers are educated and regarded as professionals, says
Vartan Gregorian, president of Carnegie Corporation of New York.
The Annenberg Foundation has contributed $11.5 million to this venture;
the Ford Foundation contributed $5.75 million and the Rockefeller
Foundation, with an initial contribution of $500,000, will ensure
that Teachers for a New Era is evaluated and the lessons
learned shared with educators across the country.
We
know from research that teachers are the single most important factor
in a students achievement, says Dan Fallon, chair of
Carnegie Corporations education division and the designer
of the Teachers for a New Era initiative, and this
design will strengthen the strategies that produce the most successful
teachers.
The
eleven schools of education have support from the top leadership
at their colleges or universities and will pursue three critical
design principles of Teachers for a New Era:
1.
A culture of respect for evidence that includes looking at a graduates
effectiveness by documenting their students achievements.
2. An effective engagement by the school of education with the arts
and sciences
3. A conception of teaching as a clinical practice that encompasses
a period of residency following graduation to ensure responsibility
for graduates performance
Full
details of the Teachers for a New Era prospectus can be found
on the Corporations web site at www.carnegie.org/sub/program/teachers.html
Over
the life of the Teachers for a New Era initiative, the Corporation
and the other foundation collaborators expect to spend more than
$65 million on this teacher education design. This year, each of
the seven institutions will receive a $5 million commitment, over
five years, which they must match locally. Additional foundation
grants will cover evaluations and up to $500,000 that each university
will share with its local partners including school districts and
other teacher education programs.
Carnegie
Corporation of New York was created by Andrew Carnegie in 1911 to
promote "the advancement and diffusion of knowledge and understanding."
As a grantmaking foundation, the Corporation seeks to carry out
Carnegie's vision of philanthropy, which he said should aim "to
do real and permanent good in the world." The Corporation's
capital fund, originally donated at a value of about $135 million,
had a market value of $1.6 billion on September 30, 2002. The Corporation
awards grants totaling approximately $80 million a year in the areas
of education, international peace and security, international development
and strengthening U.S. democracy.
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