Winfrey calls educator a role model; check will help 26 students attend
The Associated Press
updated 1:26 p.m. CT, Wed., Dec. 31, 2008
ATLANTA - A letter from Oprah Winfrey last week seemed like the world’s best Christmas present — until teacher Ron Clark noticed an extra piece of paper flutter out of the envelope.
That’s when the Atlanta educator saw the $365,000 check for the innovative private school he opened in one of the city’s poorest neighborhoods in 2007. It was, quite literally, an answer to a prayer.
“We teach school all day and fundraise at night,” said Clark, who finds private donors to pay most of the $14,000 annual tuition for each student. “To have an unsolicited gift come like that is incredible.”
Clark surprised his students with the news of the donation Wednesday morning in a gathering at the south Atlanta school. The children, parents and teachers erupted in deafening cheers when he showed off the check.
Several cried at the news.
“Everything they learn is enhanced because of the teachers’ dedication and creativity,” said a tearful Gloria Nesmith, whose son, Cameron, is a fifth-grader at the academy. “And Oprah noticed. I’m just overwhelmed.”
The donation, which likely will go to scholarships for students, would pay for 26 children to attend the school for one year, Clark said. The 80-student middle school depends almost entirely on donations to operate.
In her letter, to Clark, Winfrey calls him a role model and applauds the “profound difference you’re making with your passion for teaching.”
The check was issued by the Oprah Winfrey Foundation, which gave $4 million to educational programs in 2008, said foundation executive director Caren Yanis.
Clark and his students became overnight stars during the presidential election when a video of the students performing a political rap they wrote grabbed the public’s attention on YouTube. The children ended up performing the rap, called “Vote However U Like,” on national TV shows including CNN and BET.
Teachers at the school frequently use rapping, dancing and drumming to help students learn.
Clark, who taught in one of New York City’s toughest schools and wrote the best-selling teaching book “The Essential 55,” opened the school last year with proceeds from his book and private donations.
Nearly all of its 80 students are from middle- and low-income households. Parents pay a small part of the tuition and the rest is paid by donors.
Clark has appeared on “The Oprah Winfrey Show” twice — once when he was named Disney American Teacher of the Year in 2000 and again when his book made the New York Times best-seller list.
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/28451271/
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1It's a great story - except in this economic atmosphere, it's still kind of sad. I read it and thought 26 kids for one year - what happens next year? They DO have a buffer year of fundraising - but in this economic climate where we're still just beginning to find out how seriously wrong some investments have gone, how can a person trying to pull off miracles in the classroom know what's fiscally safe and really going to benefit those kids? It's great that there are people who happily invest in kids they don't know, but as a society, and one of the most powerful nations in history, the rest of us should serve our kids and teachers better than that. But yea! Oprah.
2Well this is a good thing. And yes, it is good when strangers can help others/children who are in need that they don't know.
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