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Private Ventures for the Public Good. A Campaign to Change Opinions and Improve Opportunities to Benefit Education Entrepreneurs and the Students They Serve. Threats To Education Industry. Gridlocked political process Budget shortfalls Teacher and public employee union agitation
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Private Ventures for the Public Good A Campaign to Change Opinions and Improve Opportunities to Benefit Education Entrepreneurs and the Students They Serve
Threats To Education Industry • Gridlocked political process • Budget shortfalls • Teacher and public employee union agitation • Skeptical and negative news media • Lack of evidence of private sector effectiveness • Heavy-handed, monopolistic practices of public education
Anti-Education Industry Rhetoric, Policies • In Public Policy and Procurement: • I3 Grants are open only to public school districts and non-profit organizations • TN, LA, NJ and other states explicitly prohibit private sector companies from participating in charter school management. • NY allows only faith-based and non-profit organizations to bid on an after-school tutoring program • In the News Media: • A NY Times columnist refers to Pearson as “the world’s largest for-profit education business.” • The Washington Post emphasizes the involvement of “for-profit” organizations in a local county’s move toward more online learning. • A three-part Minneapolis Star-Tribune expose on SES focuses on “the most successful providers . . . for-profit companies.”
Opportunities for Education Industry • NCLB created market for school/student improvements: • Tutoring/Test Prep • School Turnaround • Assessment • Professional Development for teachers/principals • Charter school management • Drop out prevention/recovery • Private sector offers experienced talent, proven record • Investor interest in PreK-12 is heightened • Public K-12 education performance continues to lag
Education Industry Leadership: The Time is Now • Public education needs help • Government(s) cannot fix education • Businesses bring critical resources to PreK-12 public education: • Innovation • Research & Development • Capital • Scalability • Focus on Customers
Public Ventures for the Public Good:Vision • EIA-led, long-term campaign to help create a fairer and more open market for private sector providers of education services and products. • Components • Advocacy • Communications • Research • Professional Development
Why EIA? • 22-year record as the voice and champion of education entrepreneurs, businesses, and investors. • Effective advocacy and government relations programs at federal, state and local levels; coalition-building; media relations and public communications; research and reporting on preK-12 industry trends and issues. • Partnership building-Johns Hopkins University • Coordination with other preK-12 associations
Campaign Goals • Research– Produce and communicate credible, third-party research on the efficacy of private sector contributions. • Communicate– Raise awareness and understanding of the positive educational and economic impacts of the private-sector among policymakers, public education officials, the news media, and families. • Demonstrate– Document and communicate to key stakeholders the best practices of proprietary providers of education products and services. • Advocate – Foster open and fair markets for business opportunities and promote public-private partnerships.
Campaign: Four Pillars Professional Development Research Communications Advocacy
Research Pillar • Collect, disseminate education industry facts • Economic impact • Educational impact • Values, best practices of sector organizations, partnerships • Expand evidence of effectiveness • Stakeholder opinion polling • Institute on Education Industry (IEI) – EIA collaboration with Johns Hopkins University School of Education • Promotion of member accreditation
Communications Pillar • Create “one-stop shop” of sector information, knowledge • Website • Social media channels • News media materials, spokesperson • Promote and celebrate sector success • Traditional media relations • Utilize member companies as conduits
Professional Development Pillar • Develop graduate-level courses and degrees for education entrepreneurs • Collaboration between Institute of Education Industry, Johns Hopkins School of Education, Johns Hopkins Carey School of Business • Course content • Span traditional and non-traditional education sectors • Masters, EdD and executive-style seminars • Support annual IEI conference • Highlight key industry issues; career development • Participants from academia, social entrepreneurship, education industry • First conference: Washington, DC, February, 2013
Advocacy Pillar • Outreach and advocacy to government regulators, legislative bodies (federal and state) • Ongoing polling of stakeholders • Third-party government relations support • Focus on federal and state legislation, action: • Federal – ESEA reauthorization • State – Policy ideas, amendments to ensure fair private sector participation
What Does Success Look Like? • “Agnostic” contracting language • Federal, state and local governments • Proprietary, tax-paying organizations on equal footing with public school districts, non-profits • Positive movement in awareness, knowledge, opinion • Qualitative and quantitative opinion poll data • Superintendents, Title 1 directors, legislators, regulators
Campaign Governance and Leadership • Strategic Direction • EIA Board of Directors • Policy and Communications Committee • Management, Implementation of Programs • EIA staff • Partner organizations • Fundraising • EIF providing support for fundraising from individual donors to serve as catalyst for campaign launch
Private Ventures for the Public Good:How You Can Help • Requested funding based on 2012 company revenue Annual RevenuesAnnual Fee $0 – $1MM $3,500 $1MM – $5MM $8,500 $5MM – $10MM $13,500 $10MM – $20MM $18,500 Greater than $20MM $25,000 • Three-year commitment • Payable to EIA or EIF