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There at the Beginning callout

Understanding Boston:

 

Education

View video clips from the Understanding Boston Forums
Teaching in the 21st Century,
Out of the Debate and Into the Schools: Comparing Practices and
Strategies in Traditional, Pilot and Charter Schools in the City of Boston

and
The Education Revolution: Fulfilling the Promises of Reform.

Strengthening the education pipeline—beginning with universal, high quality pre-kindergarten and extending through higher education—is crucial to Greater Boston’s—and the entire region’s—competitiveness in the global economy. 

Through its research and civic leadership, the Boston Foundation supports efforts to make high quality early education available to all children in Massachusetts.  It is also dedicated to improving education for children in the Boston Public Schools through systemic reforms.  And, as an early and consistent supporter of the Pilot School movement and of charter schools, the Foundation encourages school choice and innovation in education.

With the knowledge that Boston’s young people spend only 20 percent of their time in school, the Foundation also works in partnership with other organizations to strengthen and improve Out-of-School Time activities for Greater Boston’s young people.

 Education Spotlight:
Toward Closing the Achievement Gap: A One-Year Progress Report on Education Reform in Massachusetts
Less than 2 years after Massachusetts passed sweeping reform legislation that led to a $250 million ‘Race to the Top’ award from the federal government, an examination of the state’s reform and innovation finds many schools benefitting from the new rules and tools created in the reform legislation in the city of Boston and other districts, but cautions that systemic efforts must be made to broaden and deepen the pace of reform. The report looks at the progress of school reform in the state since the passage of the Achievement Gap Act in January 2010, through close evaluation of data and interviews with stakeholders, and lays out a number of recommendations to support continued change.
Race to the Top report card cover JPG
Indicators-related research:
October 07, 2009
October 07, 2009
October 05, 2009
 
Selected grants:
June 10, 2010
June 10, 2010
March 30, 2010
  
Recent Education Reports:
Case for Community Colleges cover
This report offers a comprehensive set of recommendations for strategically revamping the Massachusetts community college system to better align it with the needs of a 21st-century workforce. The recommendations emerged from research, by the Workforce Strategy Center and MassINC, that illustrated the challenges facing the Massachusetts community college system and the features of effective community college systems in other states.
How Students Are Making It
Despite our region's higher than average demand for workers with postsecondary degrees, college completion rates for Boston Public Schools graduates are low. Only 28% of non-exam school graduates from the class of 2003 who enrolled in college had obtained a degree six years later. Join us for the discussion of a new report that reflects the experiences of Boston Public Schools graduates in college – in their own words – and explores the similarities and differences among those who are struggling and those who are making it.
Success Boston report cover JPG
The Success Boston College Completion Initiative aims to double the number of Boston Public Schools (BPS) graduates earning college degrees, beginning with the Class of 2011. In 2010, Massachusetts colleges and universities were invited to join this initiative, many developing individual campus plans to improve the achievement and success of BPS graduates they enroll. The completed plans are summarized in this report. The report also discusses ways higher education participants propose to collaborate with each other and with the BPS, the business community, nonprofit organizations, and others working with Boston students on college transition and success issues. Finally, it outlines a structure for managing the involvement of the higher education community as one of the pillars of Success Boston.
Out of the Debate cover
In January 2009, the Boston Foundation, in partnership with the Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, published Informing the Debate, which suggested middle and high school students attending charter schools significantly outperform their counterparts attending traditional schools.  This new study uses the findings from Informing the Debate as a launching point to delve deeper into the issues that may explain differences in student outcomes – thus moving us out of the debate and into the schools.
Who's Making It cover
This report takes an in-depth look at the academic experiences of recent Boston Public School graduates during their first two years of college.  It finds that students with more rigorous high school preparation had much higher rates of persistence, progress and performance.  It also reveals that, not surprisingly, those who attended college continuously, without taking a break do best—and that the efforts colleges make to help students do count.   Recommendations for colleges, high school and local leaders are included.
The Arts Advantage cover
This report contains new research about the state of arts education in Boston.  It provides a detailed picture of current offerings in the schools as well as a set of recommendations advanced by School Superintendent Carol R. Johnson.
Informing the Debate cover
On January 6, 2009, the Boston Foundation and the Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education released a groundbreaking report by a team of Harvard and MIT  researchers at an Understanding Boston forum that, for the first time, effectively compares student performance at charter and pilot schools against a similar group of students attending traditional public schools in Boston. The report uses an innovative research design based on school lotteries that made possible a direct comparison of charter and pilot school students with their peers, for the first time.
Getting to the Finish Line cover
This report provides a detailed outline of the story of the Boston Public Schools (BPS) Class of 2000 as seen through the lens of college enrollment, graduation and continuing enrollment. This is a study of student experiences and tells us how many students from the BPS Class of 2000 enrolled in two and four year colleges over the seven years following high school graduation.
  
Education Forums:
December 11, 2008
Paul S. Grogan, President and CEO of the Boston Foundation, opened a major forum on December 11th attended by hundreds of educators, civic leaders, teachers and parents. The occasion was the release of the much-anticipated Boston’s Education Pipeline: A Report Card, the first comprehensive view of the entire arc of Boston’s system of educational opportunities and outcomes from early childhood development to PreK-12 schooling through college or post-secondary training and into the workforce.
March 20, 2008
Dr. Carol R. Johnson, Superintendent of the Boston Public Schools, engaged in a wide-ranging dialogue with the award-winning broadcast journalist David Boeri at a special spring forum sponsored by the Boston Foundation and the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum.
February 27, 2007
A report released by the Boston Foundation at an Understanding Boston forum in late February highlights the central role that strong community colleges can play in building a successful workforce development strategy for the global economy. It also details areas in which community colleges in Massachusetts— with a particular focus on Greater Boston—lag behind national standards in terms of student performance and state support, and identifies ways to strengthen these important institutions.
January 18, 2006
Principals, teachers, parents, administrators, funders, civic leaders. It was standing room only at the Boston Foundation on the morning of January 18th for an Understanding Boston forum focused on the first report to measure the performance of Boston’s Pilot Schools. Unique to Boston, Pilot Schools are generally small schools that set their own course in everything from curriculum and budget to schedule and staffing. The Boston Foundation has been a major supporter of Pilot Schools by providing the early funding needed to start new schools and help district schools to explore the innovative Pilot model. 
 
Boston Indicators Project
"A Great Reckoning" Visit the website and review the latest Indicators Report.
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