The opening of , Ohio, has lots of people in education circles swooning. The school in the the NBA starâs hometown has been described in national media as daring, cutting-edge, and the first of its kind.
But is the school, spearheaded by the NBA titan to serve at-risk students with a STEM-focused curriculum and extensive wrap-around services, reallyunlike any other school?
Its principal, Brandi Davis, thinks so.
As : "[T]he I Promise School is unique because not only are we a STEM-designated school by the state of Ohio, but we have trauma-informed support because we are truly into educating the entire child, the whole child, focusing not just on their academics, but also on their social, emotional needs, as well. And then I feel the missing link in public education is family wraparound support.â
Advocates of traditional public schools are cheering the fact that the new school is part of Akron Public 69´ŤĂ˝, and not an independent charter.
âLeBron James could have followed the well-worn path of other celebrities by putting money into a charter school,â , an education historian and staunch advocate of traditional schools, on her blog. âBut, no, he partnered with the Akron public schools to open a public school. Good on LeBron!â
What Is the LeBron James âI Promise Schoolâ?
The I Promise School, which will eventually serve 1st through 8th grades, is exclusively for students who are academically behind. The schoolâwith financial backing from the LeBron James Family Foundationâis pledging to pull out all the stops. Among its offerings:
- Longer school days and school year;
- Curriculum focused on science, technology, engineering, and math;
- Free college tuition to the University of Akron for students who graduate high school;
- Food pantry for families; and
- GED and job search support for parents.
All students will receive free bicycles and Chromebooks. And the schoolâs supports donât stop with families. Teachers will get help too, :
To truly provide emotional and psychological services for at-risk children and their families requires well-trained and supported teachers. The I Promise School gives teachers access to psychological services. Every Wednesday afternoon will be reserved for career development. James even hired a personal trainer to work with teachers who want a guided workout."
But the idea of educating the âwhole child"âthat schools must address the range of non-academic factors that get in the way of student achievementâhas been around for decades.
Both charter schools and traditional public schools have built in wrap-around services for students and their families, which is the central idea behind the community schools movement. To name check just a few: New Yorkâs Harlem Childrenâs Zone, the , and Cincinnatiâs community learning centers.
STEM programming has also been embraced by many public and private schools that serve low-income students.
And LeBron follows the path of other deep-pocketed . Hip-hop artist and music producer Sean âDiddyâ Combs and rapper Pitbull have opened charter schools in New York City and Miami, respectively. Sports stars Deion Sanders, Andre Agassi, Kevin Johnson, and Jalen Rose all founded charter schools.
Celebrities support schools in other ways. Chance the Rapper, for example, has given generously to the Chicago Public 69´ŤĂ˝.
Perhaps most analogous to LeBronâs I Promise School is the one that in East Palo Alto, Calif. is a tuition-free, private school for low-income families which provides extensive healthcare to students and their families. (Chan, who is the CEO of the school, is a pediatrician.)
So how does LeBronâs new school actually stand apart?
âI donât know if itâs different, but itâs following a promising and fairly early trend,â said Julia Freeland Fisher, the director of education research at the Clayton Christensen Institute, which specializes in the concept of âdisruptive innovationâ in education and health care.
But, she said, that somewhat misses the point: âI care less whether itâs unique and more if it creates a proof point, and an infrastructure in the school system, and starts to pressure policymakers to put money behind poverty relief.â
Whatâs Unique About the I Promise School?
There are a couple of ways in which the I Promise School stands out, said Pedro Noguera, a professor of education at UCLA who has studied urban education for three decades. First, itâs not a charter school. Second, the I Promise School is unusual in the breadth and depth of the services it will offer.
âI think the full package together makes it a very attractive school,â said Noguera. âA lot of urban schools, because thereâs been so much disinvestment in education, canât offer after-school programs or a full range of services. It probably means that [Jamesâ] financial commitments wonât be a one shot.â
While the investment from the LeBron James Family Foundation, which is funding much of the non-academic resources, means that this idea may be difficult to replicate without a wealthy benefactor, the school could still have a broader impact beyond the students itâs serving.
âItâs shedding light on something that people have been doing for decades, that research has showed is promising, but is still underexplored,â said Fisher. âThe fact that this is making national headlines in this news cycle, is exciting.â
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Photos:
(At top): Basketball star LeBron James speaks at the opening ceremony for the I Promise School in Akron, Ohio, on July 30. The school is supported by the LeBron James Family Foundation, and is run by the Akron Public 69´ŤĂ˝. --Phil Long/AP
(Middle): The opening ceremony for the I Promise School draws a crowd, and aerial coverage by the Goodyear blimp. --Phil Long/AP
(Bottom): The lobby of the I Promise School features a display of LeBron Jamesâ basketball shoes on surrounding walls. --Phil Long/AP