|
|
News
at The Chicago Public Education Fund
Aidan Leonard, Development/Communications
Associate
(312) 558-4503
Education Week, October
12, 2005
Network aims to bolster business support
for schools
By Lynn Olson, Education Week
Washington—The U.S. Chamber
of Commerce last week brought policymakers, corporate leaders,
and education professionals together here as part of an aggressive
new venture to increase the business community’s involvement
in education.
The three-day meeting, Oct. 5-7, marked
the first public gathering of the Business Education Network,
a coalition supported by the Washington-based chamber and
other business organizations and corporations, to address
issues facing public education. It focused primarily on building
partnerships between business and education to improve American
competitiveness and student achievement.
“One of the things that we’re struggling
with is priorities,” said Stephen Jordan, who directs the
chamber’s Center for Corporate Citizenship, which co-hosted
the event along with 10 national corporations. “There is a
company involved in almost every single aspect of the educational
process,” he noted. “What would happen if we could concentrate
some firepower?”
Tom Luce, the assistant secretary of
the U.S. Department of Education’s office of planning, evaluation,
and policy development, agreed that the sprawling K-12 system
would not be transformed “if you don’t prioritize and you
don’t take things to scale. That’s the central issue the business
community has to face,” he said.
But, as discussions here made clear,
there’s a long list of priorities clamoring for business leaders’
attention, from redesigning high schools to improving school
leadership. One unifying goal is the need to improve the collection
and dissemination of education data, argued Mr. Luce, noting,
“You cannot run your businesses without data.”
Others asserted that companies could coalesce around the unifying
mission of preparing all young people for work, further learning,
and citizenship.
Whatever priorities companies pick, said Scott Smith, the
president of the Chicago-based Tribune Publishing Co. and
the founder of the Chicago Public Education Fund, “I would
say for any of us, ‘Stay focused, go deep.’ ”
Those gathered here said the pressure on schools to produce
results, in large part because of the federal No Child Left
Behind Act, has generated a particularly ripe climate for
partnerships between business and education.
“The conversation is so different,” said Margery W. Mayer,
the president of the New York City-based Scholastic Education,
a publisher of print and computerized products to improve
precollegiate reading achievement. “We’re talking about schools
that are really focused on accountability now.”
Pressure and Support
Businesses can provide a powerful combination
of pressure and support, those gathered here said, but they
must convince educators that they are on their side.
“You just can’t come in and tell folks how bad they are,”
said G. Thomas Houlihan, the executive director of the Washington-based
Council of Chief State School Officers.
Dana E. Egreczky, the president of the New Jersey Chamber
of Commerce’s Business Coalition for Educational Excellence,
worried, “There is a certain amount of apathy in the business
community, particularly among small and medium-sized businesses.”
Without them, she cautioned, “we’re not going to get very
far.”
The meeting included the public unveiling of the Business
Education Network Web site, www.businesseducationnetwork.net.
The information clearinghouse includes descriptions of more
than 300 effective partnerships, forum discussions, and tool
kits for collaboration between business and education.
“We’re seeing the achievement gap starting to narrow and test
scores starting to improve, but we can’t let up,” said Edward
B. Rust Jr., the chairman and chief executive officer of State
Farm Insurance, based in Bloomington, Ill.
“There is no time for recess,” he said, noting that developing
nations are picking up on America’s best practices “and they’re
scaling them.”
Top >

|
|
|