Business/Education Partnership Forum Newsletter
September 2009 - v4n9
IN THIS ISSUE:
- Note from the editor
- Top articles, commentaries, and announcements from August 2009
- Upcoming events
NOTE FROM THE EDITOR
Two years ago, I made a prediction: that within the next five years, the people who know how to build community/school partnerships were going to become some of the most important people in public education. As we start the new school year, I’m hearing more and more indicating that this shift is starting to occur. This includes updates I’m getting from partnership leaders around the country, such as the one who told me last week that her superintendent, for the first time, was starting to emphasize community partnerships at every meeting with principals. It also includes the education stories in various newspapers that are starting to focus on the funding crisis, detailing how school and district leaders are beginning to look to their communities for help.
Two newspaper items I saw just this weekend:
The first, “Cash-strapped California schools seek commercial sponsors to raise funds,” describes how some schools are making it a priority to secure new sources of revenue. Beverly Hills schools are considering launching an apparel line; Chino Valley schools are interested in selling ads in their football stadiums and securing sponsorships for school assemblies; San Diego wants to sell naming rights for their science camps. While California is in a particularly bad place in terms of funding, I would expect to see more of this elsewhere starting in the very near future.
(And I want to be clear – I understand that selling sponsorships, or an apparel line for that matter, is not the same as building partnerships. I point to the article as evidence that schools are beginning to feel an urgent need to solicit support from the community, and that partnerships will inevitably end up as a part of that mix. After all, there are only so many ads that can be placed in the football stadium, and the economic environment is not conducive to getting top dollar for ads or sponsorships.)
The next is unprecedented: a school board candidate running with a focus on boosting revenue through private support and education partnerships. Part of a Q&A with school board candidate Carol Kaufmann, running for a seat on the Gravette ( Arkansas) school board:
Q: What are your goals if elected?
A: The first goal would be to sustain and/or improve the existing curriculum and instruction. The second goal would be to research and exhaust all avenues of revenue prior to a millage increase.
Q: What challenges do you think need to be addressed?
A: I believe acquiring revenue for maintenance, upgrade, replacement and/or additional facilities is an ongoing challenge for all districts.
Q: How would you solve the district's problems?
A: I would look for alternative sources of revenue such as federal, state and working grant monies, Partners in Education, public and private industry and philanthropy.
It stands to reason that we’ll see more of this as the school year goes on, and that we’ll see more next year, and much more the year after (when the stimulus money is gone). Those new to the partnerships field will need to learn how to do them well: It’s why we’re stepping up our training and reportingt efforts, with our partnership newsletter, local workshops, and soon-to-be-announced new webinar series. Those who already have the knowledge, skills, and experience – those people will be in great demand in the very near future.
Best,
Brett
TOP ARTICLES, COMMENTARIES, AND ANNOUNCEMENTS FROM AUGUST 2009
Selected to highlight business thinking on education or innovative approaches to engagement
- Palm Beach County school district concedes major failings, says 70 percent of teachers ineffective - Palm Beach Post (August 3, 2009)
- Office Depot Foundation Rings NYSE Opening Bell on 8/3 to Celebrate Donation of its 2 Millionth Backpack in 2009 - Office Depot press release (August 3, 2009)
- Fundraisers Report Tough Times—Expect Some Improvement by Year End - Associaiton of Fundraising Professionals press release (August 4, 2009)
- Adults In Conn. Take Summer Classes, Alternate Route To Teaching Certification - Hartford Courant (August 4, 2009)
- Minority Youth Develop Culinary Skills Through Sodexo Program - Sodexo press release (August 6, 2009)
- Investing in education is just good business - Los Angeles Business Journal (August 10, 2009)
- Five new academies open - Florida Today (August 10, 2009)
- National Guard Aims to Help At-Risk Youth - Teacher Magazine (August 10, 2009)
- High-school students gear up for diesel-technology program - Arizona Republic (August 11, 2009)
- Summer jump start for high school entrepreneurs - Globe and Mail (August 11, 2009)
- Fresh & Easy Brings Back Popular Shop for Schools Fundraising Program - Fresh & Easy press release (August 12, 2009)
- Ariz. Teens Build Green Playground - Teacher Magazine (August 12, 2009)
- Momentum building on STEM education - eSchool News (August 14, 2009)
- Partnership arms math, science pros with skills to teach - Arizona Republic (August 16, 2009)
- Doctors prescribe reading aloud to youths - Statesman-Journal (August 16, 2009)
- Caring adults can help prevent teens from dropping out - Providence Journal (August 16, 2009)
- MetLife Foundation and National Guild Award $215,000 in Grants to 14 Arts Education Partnerships - MetLife press release (August 18, 2009)
- Cleveland STEM High School's freshmen start classes at Great Lakes Science Center - Cleveland Plain Dealer (August 21, 2009)
- Sturgis Public Schools and the Abbott Fund Unveil Program to Educate Students on Renewable Energy By Example - Abbott press release (August 25, 2009)
- Agreement Will Allow Parents’ Groups to Pay for School Aides - New York Times (August 25, 2009)
UPCOMING EVENTS
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