Finalist for Nation's Most Improved Urban School District
WASHINGTON – Broward County Public Schools in southern Florida has won another $250,000 in Broad Prize college scholarships as a finalist for the second year in a row for the nation's most improved urban school district, The Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation announced today.
U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan joined philanthropist Eli Broad and members of Congress on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. today to announce that the Aldine Independent School District outside Houston won the 2009 Broad Prize for Urban Education, the largest education award in the country.
The $2 million Broad (rhymes with “road”) Prize is an annual award that honors the five large urban school districts – out of the 100 largest – that demonstrate the strongest student achievement and improvement while narrowing achievement gaps between income and ethnic groups. The Broad Prize winner was selected by a bipartisan jury of eight prominent American leaders from government, education, business and civic sectors, including three former U.S. secretaries of education. The money goes directly to graduating high school seniors for college scholarships.
As a finalist for The Broad Prize, Broward County Public Schools will receive $250,000 in college scholarships for graduating seniors next spring. The other three finalists are Gwinnett County Public Schools outside Atlanta; the Long Beach Unified School District in California; and the Socorro Independent School District in Texas. This marked the second year that Broward County was in the running for the award, the fourth for Aldine and the first for Gwinnett and Socorro. Long Beach won the award in 2003, and this was the third year it returned as a finalist.
“Broward County students, teachers, parents, administrators and the community deserve to celebrate today,” said Eli Broad, founder of The Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation, which sponsors The Broad Prize. “To be among the top five urban school districts in the nation for two years in a row is no easy feat. It's the result of smart student-focused strategies and hard work on the part of the entire community.”
Among the reasons Broward County stood out this year among large urban school districts:
* Outperformed other similar Florida districts. In 2008, Broward outperformed other districts in Florida serving students with similar family income levels in math at all school levels (elementary, middle and high) and in reading at the middle and high school levels, according to The Broad Prize methodology.
* Demonstrated greater improvement for racial and ethnic subgroups. Between 2005 and 2008, the percentage – and scores – of Broward's African-American students taking the SAT increased. Similarly, there was a rise in the percentage of Hispanic students taking and passing Advanced Placement exams in core subjects. Broward also achieved, on average, 9 percentage point increases each year in the percent of African-American and Hispanic students taking the ACT.
* Closed achievement gaps. Between 2005 and 2008, Broward narrowed income and ethnic achievement gaps in the following areas: between Hispanic and white students in math at all school levels and in middle and high school reading, between African-American and white students in math at all school levels and between low-income students and the state average for non-low-income students in math at all levels.
* Demonstrated strong district-wide policies and practices. Broward uses effective, research-based instructional strategies, aggressively integrates technology into instruction, successfully recruits teachers to high-need schools, provides staff with opportunities to grow professionally and keeps community members involved in decision making.
Each year, 100 of the largest urban school districts nationwide are automatically eligible for The Broad Prize. Districts cannot apply for or be nominated for this award. For a full electronic press kit, including additional student outcomes, policies and practices that earned Broward its distinction as a Broad Prize finalist, please visit www.broadprize.org.
Because Broward County was a finalist for this year's Broad Prize, its high school seniors who graduate in 2010 will be eligible for $250,000 in college scholarships. Broad Prize scholarships are awarded to students who demonstrate significant financial need and show a record of academic improvement during their high school careers. Scholarship recipients who enroll in four-year colleges will receive up to $20,000 paid out over four years ($5,000 per year). Broad Prize scholars who enroll in two-year colleges receive up to $5,000 scholarships paid out over two years ($2,500 per year). For more information, please visit www.broadprize.org/scholarship_program/overview.html.
Previous Broad Prize winners include the Brownsville Independent School District, Texas (2008), the New York City Department of Education (2007), Boston Public Schools (2006), Norfolk Public Schools, Va. (2005), the Garden Grove Unified School District, Calif. (2004), the Long Beach Unified School District, Calif. (2003) and the Houston Independent School District (2002).
The selection jury that chose this year’s winner included:
* Henry Cisneros, chairman and CEO of CityView America, former president of Univision and former U.S. secretary of housing and urban development
* James B. Hunt, Jr., chairman of the board of the Hunt Institute for Educational Leadership and Policy and former governor of North Carolina
* Shirley Ann Jackson, president of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and former chair of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission
* Roderick Paige, chairman and founder of Chartwell Education Group and former U.S. secretary of education
* Richard W. Riley, former U.S. secretary of education and former governor of South Carolina
* Donna Shalala, president of the University of Miami and former U.S. secretary of health and human services
* Margaret Spellings, executive vice president of the National Chamber Foundation and former U.S. secretary of education
* Andrew L. Stern, international president of Service Employees International Union
The selection jury evaluated publicly available student performance data compiled and analyzed by MPR Associates, Inc., a leading national education research-consulting firm. In addition, the jury evaluated the five finalist districts’ policies and practices, based on site visits, interviews with administrators, teachers, principals, parents, community leaders, school board members and union representatives and classroom observations. The site visits were conducted by a team of education practitioners led by SchoolWorks an education consulting company in Beverly, Mass.
Broward County was originally selected as a finalist by a review board of 20 prominent education researchers, policy leaders, practitioners and executives from leading universities, national education associations, think-tanks and foundations that evaluated publicly available student performance data.
The Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation is a national venture philanthropy established by entrepreneur and philanthropist Eli Broad to advance entrepreneurship for the public good in education, science and the arts. The Broad Foundation’s education work is focused on dramatically improving urban K-12 public education through better governance, management, labor relations and competition. The Broad Foundation’s Internet address is www.broadfoundation.org.
Note: An archived Web cast of the event will be accessible at (www.broadprize.org).
# # #