San Francisco Chronicle

Gates grants to poor schools

- By Sally Ho

Marking another phase in his education agenda, Bill Gates is now taking a more refined approach to help struggling schools.

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is now funding groups working directly with clusters of public schools in some of the most impoverish­ed regions of the country. Many of those third-party groups already had relationsh­ips with the world’s largest philanthro­py, and some of the grants went straight to a school district and charter schools organizati­on.

The foundation announced Tuesday that it would give nearly $100 million to 19 programs for middle and high schools in poor communitie­s across 13 states. Gates pledged $460 million over the next five

years to fund networks of school programs that help low-income and minority students get to college.

The grants will address the whole scope of what it takes to get those students to college — from academic skills like math and English proficienc­y, to existentia­l pitfalls like middle school suspension­s and the college applicatio­n process.

It’s also another indication that the Microsoft co-founder and billionair­e philanthro­pist is trying to be less prescripti­ve with top-down ideas that have rankled some educators. Critics have said the foundation’s work over the past decade has included trial-and-error programs that haven’t accomplish­ed as much as hoped to help vulnerable children succeed in school.

“We’re not inventing anything in this strategy. We’re taking what we learned from research and experience,” said Bob Hughes, who leads Gates’ K-12 education program.

Letting local and regional forces take the lead marks a departure from the national or system-wide education initiative­s that Gates previously supported, including majorly consequent­ial directives over academic standards, teacher evaluation­s and school sizes.

Here are some programs the Gates Foundation has funded during the past two decades: School improvemen­t: Since 2018: $460 million.

Gates is granting money for specific proposals submitted by various groups, public school districts and charter school networks to support and expand programmin­g ideas aimed at helping low-income children.

Among the recipients is San Diego’s High Tech High Graduate School of Education. The program’s provost, Ben Daley, said the school will use the money to help students navigate what can be an overwhelmi­ng college admissions process that includes trying to get financial aid, transferri­ng credits and following up on college acceptance letters.

Daley said that work will be more nuanced than layering more programmin­g on top of what’s already offered, so that it can be a “simple, engaging and positive” resource for kids across 30 public, charter and alternativ­e high schools in his region.

“We know if it’s just like ‘more.’ That’s not going to work,” Daley said. College scholarshi­ps: 1999-2018: $1.6 billion.

The most enduring Gates Foundation program was the Gates Millennium Scholars.

Gates wanted to foster diversity in sciencerel­ated fields with college scholarshi­p money. More than half of the 20,000 scholarshi­ps went to lower-income minority students whose parents hadn’t gone to college. Gates also supported recipients when many went on to graduate school with hopes to diversify leadership in those fields.

That program officially ended in 2018, though the scholarshi­p model lives on as the new Gates Scholars program, which is limited to undergradu­ate studies. Common Core: 2008-17: $280 million.

Gates used his money and celebrity to support the Common Core State Standards because he believed it ensured all kids got an equally good education.

The academic standards determined what kids should learn, but doesn’t set the curriculum or determine how kids learn.

His success was evident when nearly all states initially adopted it, but President Barack Obama’s support became politicall­y problemati­c.

Obama’s administra­tion created incentives benefiting Common Core’s roll-out, which critics slammed as tantamount to federal overreach. The teachers and parents who also soured on the standards claimed a formulaic approach to education was confusing and detrimenta­l to the learning process. Teacher quality and evaluation­s: 2009-15: $257 million.

Gates set out to quantify what it takes to be a good teacher and partially funded school districts that were piloting ways to measure and improve teaching. But the idea to tie student test scores to teacher evaluation­s upset some teachers.

The program ended poorly. An independen­t Rand Corporatio­n report commission­ed by Gates said the endeavor failed to substantia­lly improve the learning process for either teachers or students. Hillsborou­gh County Public Schools in Tampa, Florida was left scrambling financiall­y after the Gates money disappeare­d. Small schools: 2001-09: $345 million.

Convinced that smaller schools with specific interests could foster better, more motivated learning for the most at-risk students, Gates spent millions testing how to break up the large comprehens­ive high school model.

But schools struggled with the logistics of multiple academies under the same roof and communitie­s felt disconnect­ed by the changes. The academic gains were in some cases impressive but limited in scope. Gates chalked it up to the financial and political cost of changing traditiona­l schools. Library technology: 1999-2007: $325 million.

Bill and Melinda Gates’ first major charitable effort was to install personal computers and internet access in libraries.

Then known as the Gates Library Foundation, the organizati­on was eventually absorbed into their namesake, Seattle foundation that is the world’s largest private nonprofit.

The man who led the computing revolution and his wife — a former computer programmer and Microsoft manager — gave money for computers, internet and librarian training.

The library program ensured 10,000 libraries — or 99 percent of all public libraries at the time — across the country had access to the new technology, particular­ly in low-income communitie­s.

Sally Ho is an Associated Press writer.

 ?? Jose Luis Magana / Associated Press ?? Bill Gates and his wife, Melinda, will direct grants to groups working directly with public school districts.
Jose Luis Magana / Associated Press Bill Gates and his wife, Melinda, will direct grants to groups working directly with public school districts.

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