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That $34 Million Gift to Oakland Includes Millions for School Health Centers, Early Ed

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Shop 55, the health center at Oakland High, is on the list to receive some of the grant money from a San Francisco Foundation anonymous donor.  (Jane Meredith Adams/EdSource Today)

An anonymous donor seeking to improve Oakland is investing in education. Nearly a quarter of the donor’s $34 million gift made this week to city organizations is targeted to school health centers, discipline reform in schools,  and early education teacher training and materials.

The donor reportedly cold-called the San Francisco Foundation earlier this year to float the idea of the gift and to ask Fred Blackwell, chief executive of the philanthropic foundation, to help disperse the funds. The focus of the grants is on “scaling proven solutions” to academic and economic obstacles faced by Oakland residents, according to a news release from the foundation, which donates grant money to nonprofits throughout the Bay Area.

The upshot is an $8 million gift to Oakland schools for what the foundation described as “a preK-12 system of support.” The donor requested that the money be put to work this summer.

“We have a chance to have a very direct, immediate and positive impact on Oakland schools and families starting this school year and continuing for quite some time,” said Troy Flint, spokesman for the Oakland Unified School District.

The California School-Based Health Alliance, a statewide organization, received $2 million to support trauma-informed care in 15 school-based health centers in Oakland, including centers at Oakland Technical High School, Elmhurst/Alliance Middle School and Castlemont High School.

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The work will include schoolwide screenings, support groups and support for teachers to help students cope with the effects of severe trauma, according to the Alliance.

The Oakland Public Education Fund, the district’s fundraising and grant management arm, received $6 million to fund early childhood education teacher training, restorative justice programs, the expansion of the African American Student Achievement program, and community school coordinators.

According to the San Francisco Foundation and Oakland Unified, the funding means that:

  • 15 middle and high schools will gain new clinic staff and programs dedicated to addressing the impact of trauma;
  • Eight schools will launch restorative justice programs to reduce suspensions and expulsions;
  • 14 schools will have a full-service community schools coordinator;
  • An African American Female Achievement program will be created to complement the existing African American Male Achievement program, which works to improve academic performance and graduation rates of African American boys, and
  • All early childhood classrooms will receive teacher training, new curriculum and literacy materials

Oakland schools also will benefit indirectly from the donor’s new grants to nonprofit organizations that serve youth, Flint said. Those grants include $1.3 million to the Destiny Arts Center, $1 million to the East Oakland Youth Development Center and $2.5 million to Youth Uprising, a community center for health services, arts programs and education support.

Jane Meredith Adams covers student health and well-being for EdSourceEmail her or Follow her on Twitter.

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