The well-being of our region depends on how well we educate
our citizens. While ongoing efforts toward education reform are
well-intentioned and achieve some significant victories, they are
only incremental successes. In order to ensure higher and more
varied academic outcomes, we must rethink some of the fundamental
elements of what it means to educate all students.
As there are now many educators, philanthropies,
policymakers, and businesses committed to educational improvement,
the time has come to respond differently. We need new approaches. We
can and must do better.
Questions we aim to answer through our Systems
Building initiative include:
- Can we improve student outcomes dramatically enough by
improving current classroom models and practices rooted in
familiar institutional structures?
-
Should we invest in varied methods of educating students that
differ dramatically from current, traditional approaches?
-
What are the relative costs of various, innovative approaches to
learning versus the costs of continued failure to educate enough
people sufficiently?
The investments made through the Foundation’s Systems
Building initiative focus on the reevaluation of current education
systems in order to identify innovations, policies, and other
opportunities that may lead to a dramatic increase in the number of
students possessing the skills necessary to succeed in the 21st
century.
While there now exists at least a partial concentration on
investigating wide-reaching innovations in each of the Foundation’s
initiatives, the Systems Building initiative specifically focuses on
reevaluating current systems in order to best affect large-scale
change.
The Foundation also supports strategies that aim to enhance
public understanding of the need to reevaluate our current education
systems.
For information on projected 2008 funding opportunities in
Systems Building and our other initiatives, visit the
Guidelines page.