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Home >  Books >  With the Best of Intentions
With the Best of Intentions
Print Mail
How Philanthropy Is Reshaping K–12 Education
Edited by Frederick M. Hess
Posted: Monday, November 21, 2005
With the Best of Intentions
300 pages
Harvard Education Publishing Group  (Cambridge)
Publication Date: October 2005
Paperback
ISBN: 1-891792-65-2
Hardcover
ISBN: 1-891792-66-0

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From the Gates small school initiative to the Annenberg challenge to the Broad prize for urban education, philanthropic giving has played an increasingly prominent role in recent years in education reform efforts across the United States. Yet while we recognize that philanthropic organizations influence education in countless ways, we know strikingly little about the extent, dynamics, and results of their efforts. This lack of knowledge calls out for urgent attention of total K-12 spending, it has a disproportionate impact in shaping reform agendas and promoting cutting-edge efforts to improve schools and classrooms.

With the Best of Intentions aims to fill this gap, offering lively perspectives on the role of philanthropy in K-12 education. It opens by surveying the current landscape in philanthropic giving to education, then examines the major goals of recent philanthropic efforts: building new schools, supporting troubled districts, promoting school choice, and advancing educational research and policy. The book concludes by looking at some of the major lessons--for educators, philanthropists, policymakers, and community leaders--of philanthropic contributions to schools and school systems.

Frederick M. Hess is the director of Education Policy Studies at the American Enterprise Institute and executive editor of Education Next. He is the editor of Urban School Reform: Lessons from San Diego and the coeditor of A Qualified Teacher in Every Classroom, both published by Harvard Education Press.



Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction

SECTION I: THE LANDSCAPE OF K-12 GIVING

  • A New Generation of Philanthropists and Their Great Ambitions
    Richard Lee Colvin
  • Buckets into the Sea: Why Philanthropy Isn't Changing Schools, and How It Could
    Jay P. Greene
  • The "Best Uses" of Philanthropy for Reform
    Leslie Lenkowsky
  • How Program Officers at Education Philanthropies View Education
    Tom Loveless

SECTION II: APPROACHES TO REFORM

  • Philanthropy and Urban School District Reform: Lessons from Charlotte, Houston, and San Diego
    Lynn Jenkins and Donald R. McAdams
  • Philanthropy and Labor Market Reform
    Jane Hannaway and Kendra Bischoff
  • Choosing to Fund School Choice
    Bryan C. Hassel and Amy Way
  • Teaching Fishing or Giving Away Fish? Grantmaking for Research, Policy, and Advocacy
    Andrew J. Rotherham

SECTION III: THE VOICES OF EXPERIENCE

  • Lessons Learned from the Inside
    Wendy Hassett and Dan Katzir
  • The International Dimension
    Stephen P. Heyneman
  • Strategic Giving and Public School Reform: Three Challenges
    Peter Frumkin

Conclusion
Notes
About the Contributors
Index

Related Links
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