Zuckerberg gave New Jersey $100MM to fix Newark's schools, and it looks like it was a was a waste

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Mark Zuckerberg gave New Jersey $100 million to fix Newark's schools, and it looks like it was a waste - Yahoo Finance

Mark Zuckerberg gave New Jersey $100 million to fix Newark's schools, and it looks like it was a waste

By Caroline Moss3 hours ago


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New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, and Newark Mayor Cory Booker visit EDUCATION NATION, an educational summit on Rockefeller Plaza -- Photo by: Charles Sykes/NBC/NBC NewsWire
In the fall of 2010, Mark Zuckerberg announced on Oprah that he'd be making a generous gift to Newark, New Jersey.


As Oprah said in her Oprah way, "one ... hundred ... million ... dollars" would be given to Newark Mayor Cory Booker and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie as the three began the Startup: Education foundation.

The plan was to turn Newark into what Zuckerberg called "a symbol of educational excellence for the whole nation," spent on retaining the best teachers, and creating environments that would produce successful students and, one day, graduates.

Newark is a city wrought with crime. Its graduation rate is about 67%. It needed the help, and Booker's vision sounded promising.

Between 2010 and 2012, The New Yorker reports that "more than twenty million dollars of Zuckerberg’s gift and matching donations went to consulting firms with various specialties: public relations, human resources, communications, data analysis, [and] teacher evaluation." Many of the consultants were being paid upwards of $1,000 a day.

“Everybody’s getting paid but Raheem still can’t read," Vivian Cox Fraser, president of the Urban League of Essex County, was quoted saying.

Today, the money is pretty much gone, and Newark has hardly become that symbol of excellence.

The New Yorker has the full 12-page story today, and we've dug into it to find some of the main timeline points you need to know.

In 2010, Mayor Booker found a loophole in getting money to help fund Newark's educational reform. It came in the form of philanthropic donations, which, unlike government funding, required no public review of priorities or spending. Gov. Christie approved the plan, and Booker's job was to find the donors.

Meanwhile, in Silicon Valley, Zuckerberg (like many other tech billionaires) had pledged to donate half of his fortune, but as The New Yorker reported, he knew new very little about urban education or philanthropy.

Booker and Zuckerberg met to discuss a vision for Newark's future. Booker wanted to significantly reward Newark teachers who improved student performance rather than focus on seniority and tenure. Teachers would be challenged and rewarded to do their jobs well, and students would benefit.

Zuckerberg was confident Newark and Booker were the right recipients for this huge gift (given over five years), and agreed to gift $100 million dollars with a few stipulations:

  • Booker would also have to raise $100 million dollars. Zuckerberg's money would release to Newark as matching dollars rolled in.
  • Booker would have to replace the current superintendent with a “transformational leader.”


The reform ended up looking like this: taking low-performing public schools and closing them, turning them into charter schools and "themed" high schools. But there was no easy way to expand charters without destabilizing traditional public schools.

In the months following the gift announcement, Booker and Christie still had no superstar superintendent and no reform plan.

Zuckerberg was concerned and urged Booker to find the superintendent, even sending Booker a poster widely seen around the Facebook campus that read, "Done is better than perfect."

Immediately, Booker appointed Cami Anderson for the job. She implemented ways to help students and improve schools (all which The New Yorker detailed), but there were roadblocks along the way, like how the students brought the issues going on in their homes with them to the classroom.

Anderson wanted to give schools more support to help students on emotional and social levels, but Newark had already been spending more money per student than most districts in the entire country, none of which was reaching the children it existed to help.

New contracts were being created, money was being hemorrhaged, and the district was going broke. But interviews — like this one in Forbes — regarding the money and the future of Newark's schools were always positive, highlighting, of course, only the good aspects of the huge monetary donation.

Anderson came up with another plan called One Newark, which sounded like it could work. Families would choose which charter or public schools they would want to send their children to. Children from the lowest-income families would get first pick. So would kids with special needs.

It all sounded great until parents and teachers realized it was only on paper. Solutions hadn't been figured out fully. Programs hadn't been developed. Issues like transportation had not yet been tackled. Things that were promised didn't come to fruition.

According to The New Yorker, Anderson, Booker, Zuckerberg, and Christie, "despite millions of dollars spent on community engagement — have yet to hold tough, open conversations with the people of Newark about exactly how much money the district has, where it is going, and what students aren’t getting as a result."

You can read the full report from The New Yorker here. http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2014/05/19/140519fa_fact_russakoff?currentPage=all
 

End Cruelty

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Didn't read that whole thing yet but Newark :comeon:

And you can't give anybody any money and expect them to keep your interests a priority. You need to build that school yourself like The Gates' (if I'm not mistaken). Consultants and teacher evaluation :mjlol:

edit: after seeing the entire turn of events, Zuckerberg really didn't do so bad outside of not knowing where his money was going. This situation is sad.
 
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Dafunkdoc_Unlimited

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Between 2010 and 2012, The New Yorker reports that "more than twenty million dollars of Zuckerberg’s gift and matching donations went to consulting firms with various specialties: public relations, human resources, communications, data analysis, [and] teacher evaluation." Many of the consultants were being paid upwards of $1,000 a day.

It's the curse of this State. We get MAD funding to do stuff but the money NEVER gets where it's supposed to go until the crooks get their share. We're STILL waiting on FEMA funds for Sandy and I don't even want to get into it about the funds from the Stimulus that were earmarked for State/Local/Municipal Government Agencies that just disappeared.

Hell, the Agency that I worked for was closed down due to misappropriation of funds 2 years after I left.

:snoop:
 

the cac mamba

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i gotta say, if i was him givin that money i woulda been like yo, shyt is gonne be done my way. fukk the unions, fukk who you have runnin things now, if you want this money all decisions go thru me

now granted, he doesnt have the time to do this shyt. but anyone who couldnt have seen this coming :childplease:
 

DEAD7

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Wouldn't addressing any structural issues involve money and investments?

What are you proposing?
I think its obvious what I would suggest, but having watched TWISM go rounds over charters, it would be silly to suggest here.



Now within the frame work of what we have, I think we should move to lessen the 'trickle down', and have the fed(:scusthov:) disperse funding directly to city/county treasurers/clerks.
The fewer filters(hands) the money passes through, the better the chances are of it(or most of it) making it to its destination. It would also make it easier to pin point corruption, and give tax payers a sense of direct control over the funding via local elections. Along with an enormous increase in transparency which means greater equality(:krs:).


:ld:
 

tmonster

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:ohhh:You mean throwing money at the problem is a waste?




Shocking.
5dyAW1F.png
 

tmonster

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i gotta say, if i was him givin that money i woulda been like yo, shyt is gonne be done my way. fukk the unions, fukk who you have runnin things now, if you want this money all decisions go thru me

now granted, he doesnt have the time to do this shyt. but anyone who couldnt have seen this coming :childplease:
trust me
he got EXACTLY what HE paid for
 

Blackgate

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was inevitable...the business of america is business.,.educating kids [of a particular background] aint a priority,,,it is necessary to have an ignorant and undereducated populace because an educated populace would be difficult to exploit...the only people guaranteed to benefited from charity [which this was] are the ones that get to pocket donated money with the fate of those in need being undermined or left to chance...
 
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