$25 Million Gift Pushes Broader Debate About Charity for Public Schools
February 16, 2018 | Read Time: 4 minutes
Stephen Schwarzman’s $25 million gift to renovate Abington High School, his alma mater, in Pennsylvania, and back a new science and technology center was the culmination of a broader conversation between the billionaire philanthropist and Amy Sichel, the school district’s superintendent, about the need for more public schools to find ways to raise private money.
“Steve and I see this as a way to start a public-private partnership, and we hope other school districts across the country follow,” said Sichel.
The gift, publicly announced this week, was the result of 15 months of talks between Schwarzman and Sichel.
The money will also support changes to Abington’s curriculum, including required classes in computer science and coding and expanded career counseling so students can start exploring career interests earlier in their education. Schwarzman says those efforts are crucial to modernize public education, give public-school students a better chance at success, and make the country much more competitive.
The goal is to make students successful in the world “not how it used to be but how the world’s going to be tomorrow and in the future,” he said.
U.S. public schools have not kept up with the U.S. revolution in technology, he says, and many of today’s students don’t have the training they need to land good-paying jobs in the rapidly evolving economy.
For the United States to advance its competitiveness around the globe, people need to shift their thinking about private donors giving to public schools, he adds. It shouldn’t be seen as controversial, and it doesn’t mean that government funding goes away.
Schwarzman has appeared on the Chronicle’s Philanthropy 50 list of the nation’s biggest donors three times.
Falling Behind
Schwarzman says while it would be great if there was enough tax money to provide all of the resources to support up-to-date technology for education, there simply isn’t that kind of government money anymore. People who run public school systems need to recognize that fact and find funding somewhere else, and that is where private philanthropy comes in, he says.
“There are huge numbers of successful people in America who are successful in part because of the education training they had when they were young,” he says. “I think people who can help should help, but I don’t think this is something that should be reserved for the very wealthy few.”
The growth in charity drives and donations to public schools has stirred controversy, with critics contending that the practice is likely to exacerbate inequality as elites pour money into their already well-financed alma maters.
Schwarzman disagrees with that assessment and doesn’t think private money to public schools is controversial. Rather, he says, it just hasn’t been done widely outside of private schools and universities.
Schwarzman was reluctant to say whether he plans to ask his wealthy peers to start supporting similar efforts, but he says this gift is his way to bring attention to the need to provide better opportunities for U.S. public school students and in turn improve the country’s prospects for success in a rapidly changing world.
“I’m taking a public position on this issue because I think it’s important to the U.S. itself,” he says. “I will hopefully continue to be visible on this issue, which should encourage others.”
Big Gifts to Public Schools
| Year of gift | Donors | Amount | Recipient | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | Anonymous | $20,000,000 | Palo Alto Unified School District (Calif.) | To rebuild athletic facilities |
| 2006 | Grace Pollock | $15,000,000 | Lion Foundation of the Camp Hill School District (Pa.) | For performing-arts programs at Eisenhower Elementary School |
| 2017 | Andre (Dr. Dre) Young | $10,000,000 | Compton Unified School District (Calif.) | For a new performing-arts center for Compton High School |
| 2016 | Kinder Foundation (Richard and Nancy Kinder) | $7,500,000 | Houston Independent School District | For a new campus for the High School for the Performing and Visual Arts |
| 2017 | James Lee Davis | $4,000,000 | Mart Independent School District (Tex.) | To support high-school teachers, boost math and science programs, and renovate facilities |
| 2009 | Edward Keller | $3,370,000 | East Aurora Union Free School District (N.Y.) | For scholarships (bequest) |
| 2015 | Archie and Sue Lorentzen | $3,000,000 | Darby School District (Mont.) | Unrestricted (bequest) |
| 2017 | James Lee Davis | $3,000,000 | Mart Independent School District (Tex.) | For a new high school |
| 2011 | Richard Kolter | $2,880,000 | Winona Area Public School District (Minn.) | For building-maintenance costs and a school construction fund (bequest) |
| 2013 | Thomas and Alba Tull | $2,200,000 | Maine-Endwell Central School District (N.Y.) | For the athletics program |
| 2016 | Rozene Supple | $2,000,000 | Palm Springs Unified School District (Calif.) | To establish an endowment for film education, performing and visual arts, and health and wellness programs |
| 2011 | Anonymous | $1,700,000 | Rye City School District (N.Y.) | To build a new field house |
| 2011 | Anonymous | $1,500,000 | District of Columbia Public Schools | For athletics programs |
| 2013 | Galen Family Foundation (Helene Galen) | $1,500,000 | Palm Springs Unified School District (Calif.) | To name its performing-arts center and to establish an endowment for the performing arts |
| 2012 | Anonymous | $1,000,000 | Oxford Area School District (Pa.) | For programs that were previously cut, such as technology, science instruction, music, art, and others |
| 2012 | Anonymous | $1,000,000 | Austin Independent School District (Tex.) | To expand arts education |
| 2014 | David and Suzanne Hoover | $1,000,000 | Boulder Valley School District (Colo.) | For a teacher-training academy |