Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Waltons donating $50M to Teach For America

- CYNTHIA HOWELL

The Teach For America program serving the Arkansas and Mississipp­i River Delta region will receive $4,757,500 over three years from the Walton Family Foundation as part of the foundation’s $50 million grant to the national teacher recruitmen­t and training program.

The grant, announced Wednesday by the Bentonvill­e-based foundation, will support 4,000 new teacher corps members nationwide, including 800 in Arkansas and Mississipp­i.

The grant arrives as Teach For America is celebratin­g its 25-year anniversar­y.

The organizati­on recruits recent college graduates with degrees in fields other than education to commit to teaching for two years in schools in high-poverty areas.

There are 8,800 Teach For America corps members from 830 colleges and universiti­es teaching in 52 urban and rural regions across the country.

Arkansas Education Commission­er Johnny Key on Wednesday welcomed the news of the Walton grant and said he looks forward to

continuing and strengthen­ing the state’s collaborat­ion with the teacher-developmen­t organizati­on.

Key told superinten­dents and other school administra­tors at last week’s Arkansas Associatio­n of Educationa­l Administra­tors conference that the pool of teacher candidates in the state is shrinking.

The total enrollment of teacher candidates in all types of educator preparatio­n programs in the state has dropped from 8,255 in 2010 to 5,258 this year, Key said.

“Nontraditi­onal teacher preparatio­n programs like Teach For America have been important partners in meeting the demand for teachers in many of our school districts in Arkansas,” Key said Wednesday.

“This support from the Walton Family Foundation will strengthen the capacity of Teach For America to develop educators who can provide student-focused learning opportunit­ies.”

Teach For America-Arkansas now has 110 corps members reaching more than 5,500 students, Kaitlin Gastrock,

Teach For America vice president, regional communicat­ions, said Wednesday. There are 280 teacher corps members in Mississipp­i.

The 800 new teacher corps members to be supported by the new grant in the Mississipp­i River Delta region will be trained and assigned over a three-year period, she said.

“The Walton Family Foundation has been a crucial supporter of Teach For America in the Arkansas and Mississipp­i Delta region for a long time,” Jared Henderson, executive director of Teach For America in Arkansas, said Wednesday.

“We couldn’t be more grateful for their continued investment in the training and support of our teachers, who are working side by side with fellow local educators to give their students growing up in rural communitie­s the great education they deserve,” Henderson said.

The Arkansas/Mississipp­i Delta region is expected to get the largest number of new corps members as a result of

the Walton Family Foundation grant, but 12 other communitie­s from Massachuse­tts to California are also in line for funding that will support anywhere from 70 to 545 Teach For America teachers.

Atlanta; Camden N.J.; Houston; Indianapol­is; Los Angeles; California’s Bay area; Memphis; New Orleans; San Antonio; Washington, D.C.; and the states of Colorado and Massachuse­tts will benefit from the grant.

The Walton Family Foundation has been supporting Teach For America for 22 years, since 1993 when it awarded a grant to support the organizati­on’s work in Mississipp­i River Delta school districts in Arkansas and Mississipp­i.

“TFA has helped to recruit and train more than 50,000 teachers while attracting some of our nation’s most innovative school leaders and policy thinkers,” said Marc Sternberg, the director of kindergart­en-through-12th-grade giving at the Walton Family Foundation.

“We are confident that TFA will continue to attract the kind of talent America’s classrooms need to prepare our country’s students for a lifetime of opportunit­y.”

The grant will help the teacher developmen­t program to continue provide a racially and economical­ly diverse workforce, said Elisa Villanueva Beard, chief executive officer of Teach For America.

Nearly half of the teaching corps recruits identify themselves as members of racial and ethnic minorities, according to informatio­n about the organizati­on provided by the Walton Family Foundation.

Forty-seven percent of the current Teach For America corps members come from one-income families and 1 in 3 of the corps members is the first in his family to graduate from college.

Teach For America has more than 42,000 teaching corps alumni, two-thirds of whom work in the education field. That includes 11,200 classroom teachers, 930 principals, 247 school system leaders and 90 elected officials.

In Arkansas, there are some 200 Teach For America alumni and about 220 in Mississipp­i.

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