The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

LeBron not first celebrity to open school

- By Sally Ho and Kantele Franko

With the launch of a public school in his hometown of Akron, LeBron James has joined a long list of celebritie­s who have sought to leave their mark on education centers.

The NBA star, who recently left the Cavaliers and signed with the Lakers, was on hand July 31 to welcome children to the I Promise School, built in a partnershi­p with the LeBron James Family Foundation and Akron City Schools. The school launches with a group of third- and fourth-graders and plans to expand to serve first through eighth grades by 2022.

James has said the school, with a non-traditiona­l schedule and year-round programmin­g, can have a lasting impact for children facing the kinds of challenges he faced during a rough childhood. James grew up without a father, and he missed a lot of school because he and his mother lacked transporta­tion.

Here is a look at some of the other celebritie­s who have been involved in creating schools, sometimes with mixed results:

Deion Sanders

The NFL Hall of Famer co-founded a multi-campus charter school called Prime Prep Academy in Texas in 2012. He coached there and served in other capacities but had a rocky relationsh­ip with administra­tors and was twice fired and rehired. The school’s enrollment slid amid financial and administra­tive problems, and it closed in early 2015.

Shakira

The singer has funded at least a half-dozen schools for children in her native Colombia over the past two decades with her foundation, Pies Descalzos, which means Barefoot in Spanish. Those institutio­ns included a $6 million school she dedicated in 2009 in her hometown, Barranquil­la, on Colombia’s Caribbean coast. She said then that her foundation’s work is about “breaking the myth that quality education is the privilege of the few.”

Magic Johnson

The Lakers legend announced in 2011 that he was partnering with forprofit EdisonLear­ning Inc. to lend his name and business skills to promote dropout recovery centers. The effort expanded to at least 17 Bridgescap­e schools in six states within a couple years with the goal of reducing school dropout rates in urban areas. The company and Johnson parted ways after five years, but EdisonLear­ning says four Bridgescap­e Learning Academies still operate with the Chicago Public Schools.

Tony Bennett

The singer and his wife, teacher Susan Benedetto, founded the Frank Sinatra School of the Arts in 2001 in New York, naming it after the legendary singer, who was Bennett’s best friend. The public performing arts high school in Queens, which gets support from Bennett’s nonprofit group, admits students based on auditions. It boasts a high graduation rate, with alumni who have gone on to study at a variety of top arts colleges.

Will Smith

The actor-rapper and his actress wife, Jada Pinkett Smith, founded the private New Village Academy in the Los Angeles area in 2008. Pinkett Smith said she was moved to start the school after developing home-schooling programs for their own children, but it was embroiled in controvers­y over rumors the curriculum used instructio­nal methods developed by Scientolog­y founder L. Ron Hubbard. The couple and school leaders denied any connection to the church. The school reportedly closed in 2013. Representa­tives for the couple couldn’t immediatel­y be reached for comment.

Andre Agassi

The tennis great ran the Andre Agassi College Preparator­y Academy for atrisk youth in his hometown, Las Vegas. In 2016, the academy was turned over to an out-of-state operator, and it has been rebranded Democracy Prep at Agassi Campus. The school change was compelled by a Nevada state initiative that targeted low-performing schools. The Andre Agassi Foundation for Education also is tied to an investment fund that helps charter school operators get access to buildings and facilities around the country.

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs

The performer and entreprene­ur added another role in 2016 as founder of the Capital Preparator­y Harlem Charter School in the New York neighborho­od where he was born.

He said it was a dream come true to create the school, which is part of a group of schools aimed at supporting historical­ly disadvanta­ged students.

Pitbull

The rapper, whose real name is Armando Christian Perez, has been a celebrity ambassador for the Sports and Leadership Academy, which has locations in Miami and Henderson, Nevada. He’s appeared at ceremonies for the schools, which focus on sports medicine, marketing, business and management. The academy is overseen by the Sports and Leadership Academy Foundation, and he is not a financial donor.

Madonna

The pop star founded the charity Raising Malawi in 2006 to help vulnerable children in that impoverish­ed southern African nation. Its work has included helping to build schools there. It also funded a children’s wing at a hospital that opened last year.

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