E.D. Hirsh, Jr. accepts the 2012 Conant Award from the ECS Executive Committee.
Recipients of
the Frank Newman Award for State Innovation (click to expand/collapse)
2013 Delaware
2012 New Hampshire
2011 New England Consortium
2010 Ohio
2009 Tennessee
2008 North Dakota
2007 Alaska (for multiple initiatives)
2006 Kentucky (Kentucky Education Reform Act of 1990 and other initiatives)
2005 Florida and Utah (co-winners, for multiple initiatives)
2004 North Carolina (NC TEACH) and
South Carolina (The Center for Educator Recruitment, Retention and Advancement)
2003 Maryland (Visionary Panel for Better Schools)
2002 Alabama (Alabama Reading Initiative) and Texas (Texas Reading
Initiative)
2001 Georgia Universal Preschool Program
2000 Connecticut Beginning Educator Support
and Training (BEST) Program
1999 North Carolina - North Carolina Community
College System
1998 Oregon - Students Recycling Used Technology
(STRUT)
New Hampshire Commissioner Virginia Barry accepts the 2012 Frank Newman Award from ECS Executive Committee member Tom Horgan.
Recipients of
the ECS Chair's Award (click to expand/collapse)
Recipients of the ECS Chairs Award
2013 Get Smart Schools
2010 Teach For America
2008 Luther Olsen and Richard Rhoda
2007 Ford Foundation, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, the Ewing Maring Kauffman Foundation and The Wallace Foundation
2006 Neil Portnow, president of the National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences.
2005 Placido Domingo
2004 Carl Takamura, Executive Director, Hawaii Business Roundtable
2003 Ron Newcomb, Education Assistant to former
Georgia Governor Roy E. Barnes
2002 Miles E. Turner, ECS Commissioner and Steering Committee
Member from Wisconsin
2001 Ed Ford, Kentucky Deputy Secretary to the
Executive Cabinet
2000 Ted Stilwill, Iowa Director of Education
1999 Ardyce L. Bohlke, Nebraska State Senator
1998 David H. Steele, Utah State Senator
1997 Howard P. "Pete" Rawlings, Maryland
State Representative
1996 John Hansen, Idaho State Senator
Recipients of
the ECS Corporate Award (click to expand/collapse)
Recipients of the ECS Corporate Award
2013 Scholastic
2012 GE Foundation
2011 ExxonMobil
2010 AT&T
2009 Project Lead The Way
2008 Simon Youth Foundation
2007 Pearson
2006 Public Broadcasting Service (PBS)
2005 Hewlett Packard Company
2004 MBNA Corporation
2003 Intel Corporation and Washington Mutual
2002 State Farm Insurance Companies
2001 MetLife and MetLife Foundation
Kelli Wells and Bob Corcoran (center) of the GE Foundation accept the 2012 ECS Corporate Award from ECS Executive Committee member Barbara Clark and former Governor Jim Geringer.
Biographies of the James Bryant Conant Award Recipients (click to expand/collapse)
Previous Winners of the James Bryant Conant Award
2013 - Gene Wilhoit Gene Wilhoit, former Executive Director of the Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO) and former Kentucky Commissioner of Education, has dedicated his career to serving education at the local, state, and national levels. He started out as a social studies teacher and principal in Ohio and Indiana. He transitioned to posts at the state level in Indiana and at the national level as a special assistant in the U.S. Department of Education. He later served as the executive director of the National Association of State Boards of Education and as the chief of the Arkansas Department of Education. As Kentucky’s commissioner of education between 2000 and 2006, Wilhoit focused on the key factors that could change education for each and every child. He oversaw finance reform, boosted standards, improved assessment and accountability systems, advocated for development of the non-cognitive and meta-cognitive skills necessary for career success, and led the development of data systems to help monitor progress. He brought state leaders together to work collectively and seek agreement on how best to solve these difficult problems. Using his exemplary skills as a facilitator and collaborator, one of Wilhoit’s most significant achievements at CCSSO was his leadership on the development and adoption of the Common Core State Standards. Working with the National Governors Association, he helped build consensus on this new generation of rigorous, internationally benchmarked standards aimed at ensuring that what students learn in math and language arts does not vary significantly across states. Ever the dedicated public servant, Wilhoit has not truly retired. He is the executive director of the new National Center for Innovation in Education at the University of Kentucky, and is joining Student Achievement Partners as a partner. For his lifetime commitment to improving public education for all students and preparing them for life after high school, Gene Wilhoit encompasses the passion and values of the late Dr. Conant and is deserving of the 2013 ECS James Bryant Conant award.
2012 - E.D. Hirsch Dr. E.D. Hirsch, Jr. is the founder of the Core Knowledge Foundation and a Professor Emeritus of Education and Humanities at the University of Virginia. While doing research on written composition, Hirsch was “shocked into education reform.” He discovered that while the relative readability of a text was an important factor in determining a student’s ability to comprehend a passage, an even more important factor was the student’s background knowledge. From this research, Hirsch developed his groundbreaking concept of “cultural literacy”—the idea that reading comprehension requires not just formal decoding skills but also wide-ranging background knowledge. In 1986, he founded the Core Knowledge Foundation to promote this concept, and a year later published the best-selling book, Cultural Literacy: What Every American Needs to Know. Today there are over 800 Core Knowledge schools—public, charter, and independent—which teach all or part of the Core Knowledge Sequence. However, the strongest evidence of Hirsch’s impact can be seen in the development of the Common Core State Standards in English Language Arts, which rest on the intellectual underpinnings of his work. With its call to place subject matter reading at the heart of language arts instruction, stay on topics within and across grades, and to support standards with a coherent, sequential curriculum, the Common Core State Standards represent the fullest expression and acceptance of Hirsch’s ideas and insights. Hirsch has authored several other acclaimed books on education reform, including The Schools We Need and Why We Don’t Have Them, The Knowledge Deficit, and The Making of Americans, solidifying his reputation as one of the most influential education reformers of our time.
2011 - Ted Kolderie Ted Kolderie is co-founder of Education|Evolving and is recognized nationally for his work on K-12 education policy and innovation since the early 1980s. He worked with the committee of the Citizens League that in late 1988 proposed “Chartered Schools,” then with legislators and Minnesota Commissioner of Education Tom Nelson on the design and implementation of the country’s first charter school law in 1991. Through the early 1990s he worked with legislators and citizens on the design and improvement of charter legislation in more than 25 states, including California, Colorado, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Florida, New Jersey and Ohio. In 2004, he and Joe Graba co-founded Education|Evolving to be a nonpartisan policy group working in Minnesota and nationally on a strategy for change and improvement in K-12 education. He has written for a variety of publications and has talked about the need for innovation in learning with organizations such as the National Education Association, the National School Boards Association, the American Federation of Teachers, the National Business Roundtable, the National Education Goals Panel, the National Conference of State Legislatures and the Progressive Policy Institute. Before entering education policy, Kolderie worked on urban and metropolitan affairs and on questions of system design in the public sector. He started his career as a reporter and editorial writer with the Minneapolis Star and Tribune. He was executive director of the Citizens League in the Twin Cities area and in the 1980s was a senior fellow at the University of Minnesota’s Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs. Kolderie graduated with a B.A. from Carleton College and a Master of Public Affairs degree from the Woodrow Wilson School of Public Affairs at Princeton University.
2010 - Linda Darling-Hammond Darling-Hammond founded and co-directs the Stanford Center for Opportunity Policy in Education to foster research, policy, and practice strategies for educational quality and equality. She also founded and oversees the School Redesign Network, which works on issues of school and district reform, and leadership development in support of powerful and equitable curriculum, instruction and assessment. Between 1994 and 2001, Darling-Hammond served as executive director of the National Commission on Teaching and America’s Future, chaired by former North Carolina Governor James B. Hunt. The blue-ribbon panel’s 1996 report, What Matters Most: Teaching for America’s Future, led to sweeping policy changes affecting teaching and schooling. Darling-Hammond began her career as a public school teacher and has since dedicated her professional life to improving educational policy at the national, state and local level. Beginning with her work as senior social scientist and director of the RAND Corporation’s education policy program, and extending through appointments at Columbia’s Teachers College and Stanford, she has conducted research on a wide range of policy issues affecting teaching and schooling while advising policymakers at all levels of government. She led President Obama’s education policy transition team in 2008-09. Darling-Hammond received her B.A. (magna cum laude) from Yale University and her doctorate in Urban Education (with highest distinction) from Temple University. She is the author or editor of 16 books and more than 300 journal articles, book chapters and monographs on issues of policy and practice. Return to top
2009 - Kati Haycock Haycock served as the national spokeswoman, advocating for children as the executive vice president of the Children’s Defense Fund, the nation’s largest child advocacy organization. In 1992, Haycock founded The Education Trust, a national organization dedicated to “the high academic achievement of all students at all levels — kindergarten through college.” Acknowledged as a true authority in the world of education reform, The Trust strengthens the voices of students most likely to be left out of mainstream educational improvement efforts. The organization also provides hands-on assistance to educators who want to work together to improve student achievement, pre-kindergarten through college. Of additional significance was Haycock’s founding and service as president of The Achievement Council, a California organization that assists teachers and principals in improving student achievement in predominantly minority schools. She also served as director of the Outreach and Student Affirmative Action programs for the University of California system. Currently, Haycock serves on the Boards of the Hunt Institute for Education Leadership and Policy, the New Teacher Project, and the Association of American Colleges and Universities. Educated in the Los Angeles city schools, Haycock received her B.A. in Political Science from the University of California, Santa Barbara and her M.A. in Education Policy from the University of California, Berkeley. Return to top
2008 - Ron Wolk
Ron Wolk
is co-founder of The Chronicle of Higher Education and founder of Education Week. Wolk spent the first three years of his career as a newspaper reporter and magazine editor. He served as assistant to President Milton S. Eisenhower at Johns Hopkins University and shortly after, worked with Clark Kerr in Berkeley as assistant director of the Carnegie Commission on the Future of Higher Education. Wolk also started and served as editor of Teacher Magazine. In 1996, he established Quality Counts, a special annual report on the condition of standards-based reform in all 50 states. He currently serves as a member of the Governor’s Task Force on Urban Education in Rhode Island; chairman of the Board of Editorial Projects in Education, publisher of Education Week; and chairman of the Board of the Big Picture Company. Return to top
2007 - Gaston Caperton Formerly as governor of West Virginia and founding director of the Institute on Education and Governance at Columbia University, and presently as president of the College Board, Caperton has been an extraordinary education statesman. His contributions to education, at the state and national levels, have been truly outstanding. After serving as governor, Caperton went on to become the founding director of the Institute on Education and Governance at Teachers College, Columbia University. Anxious to help his fellow governors with education policymaking, he established education policy seminars for governors and their staffs through the Institute. His national impact on education increased with his appointment as president of the College Board in 1999. He has worked hard to expand access to Advanced Placement courses and examinations throughout the nation, including partnerships with historically black colleges and universities and Hispanic-serving institutions to increase the number of Advanced Placement teachers of color. He has also been unwavering in his support of equity in tuition and financial aid policies and programs, and, in 2005, created the College Board’s Task Force on College Access for Students from Low-Income Backgrounds to address this issue. Under his leadership, the College Board has also broadened its mission to serve students from middle grades through college completion. Return to top
2006 - Nancy S. Grasmick Under Grasmick’s leadership over the past 15 years, Maryland has been a trailblazer and a top performer in areas ranging from standards-based school improvement to strategic planning to the education of children with disabilities. She is nationally respected for her leadership in building consensus among parents and educators on issues and programs for special education. These collaborations have led to an innovative model of funding for special education in Maryland that is systematically integrated with the state accountability system. Among her many accomplishments as superintendent are the establishment of a statewide Parent Advisory Council and the creation of a program that brings high-performing principals from other school districts into Baltimore City to run schools and train new leaders. She is a member of the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education and is the only K-12 education representative on the Committee on Prospering in the Global Economy of the 21st Century. She also served on a 20-member panel appointed by the National Academies that last fall issued the influential report Rising Above the Gathering Storm: Energizing and Employing America for a Brighter Economic Future. Over the years, Grasmick has served ECS with distinction as a member of the Steering Committee and various standing committees and as an ECS officer. Return to top
2005— Sharon Lynn Kagan Sharon Lynn Kagan has been instumental in defining and building early childhood care and education as a critically important public policy field, and as the foundation for a lifetime of education and learning. Throughout her career, she has coupled research and policy to increase public understanding of, and investment in, the programs and services that support young children and their families. Kagan, more than any other person, has defined what a system of early childhood education should include. Her work has contributed to bringing together diverse stakeholders in the early childhood field -- child care, Head Start, school-based pre-kindergarten, and family child care and support. Kagan is currently professor adjunct at Yale University's Child Study Center, where she has been engaged in teaching and research since 1980. She has published more than 150 articles and written or edited 12 books focused on issues such as the development of policy for children and families, family support, early childhood pedagogy, strategies for collaboration and service integraion, and the evaluation of social programs. Over the years, Kagan has advised and mentored presidents, governors, legislators, foundation officials, teachers, graduate students and parents. She has served as a consultant to the White House, Congress, federal agencies, the National Governors Association and numerous states, foundations, corporations and professional associations. Return to top
2004— Thurgood Marshall and John H. Stelle Thurgood Marshall During his 24 years on the bench, Marshall was an ardent supporter of individual rights, freedom of the press and due process, and he never waivered in his devotion to ending discrimination. But many believe his greatest contribribution resulted from his role as the principal architect of the stategy that demolished the legal basis for segregation in America. In the landmark case Brown vs. Board of Education of Topeka, the NAACP legal team, headed by Marshall, persuaded the Supreme Court to overturn the "separate-but-equal" doctrine that had been the law of the land since 1896. In 1961, President John F. Kennedy appointed Marshall to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, where he served until being selected three years later as U.S. Solicitor General by President Lyndon Johnson. the crowning achievement of his career came in 1967, when he became the first African-American to be elevated to the Supreme Court.
Return to top
John H. Stelle The Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944 -- better known as the GI Bill of Rights -- ranks among the most progressive and beneficial laws enacted by any nation. During the past six decades, the law has made possible the investment of billions of dollars in eduation and training for millions of veterans. When President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the GI Bill into law on June 22, 1944, it was the culmination of a remarkably well-executed effort in which a former Illinois governor named John H. Stelle played a crucial role. Stelle, a World War I veteran and past national commander of the American Legion, quarterbacked a team of Legion officials that, in the space of just six months, designed and put forth the main features of the GI Bill, organized massive public support and shepherded its successful passage through Congress. Stelle's leadership and behind-the-scens negotiating skills are widely credited for the legislation's surviving stubborn pockets of resistance, intense debate and a conference committee deadlock that nearly scuttled the bill at the 11th hour. Return to top
2003
— Roy Romer Since July
2000 when he became superintendent of the nation's second-largest
and perhaps the most-decentralized, lowest-performing school system,
Romer has improved instruction in Los Angeles' elementary schools,
where test scores in reading and math have climbed above the national
average, results not seen there in decades. When he served as Colorado's
governor from 1986 to 1998, Romer was the driving force behind many
initiatives and laws that improved education for the state's children,
as well as its adults, including: the "First Impressions"
initiative that improved and made more accessible high-quality early
childhood care and education; the Colorado Preschool Program that
helps at-risk preschoolers prepare for school; the Colorado Child
Care Resource and Referral System that helps families find quality
child care; the Governor's Task Force on Early Childhood Professional
Standards that defined what every child care provider needs to know
and be able to do to be considered highly qualified; a law that
made Colorado one of the first states to establish standards and
a statewide assessment that measured them; authorization for school
choice and charter schools; and the Internet-based Western Governors
University (WGU), which offers competency-based courses from dozens
of the nation's colleges, universities and corporations. (He worked
with Utah Governor Mike Leavitt to establish WGU.) Additionally,
while governor, Romer served as chairman of both the Education Commission
of the States and the National Education Goals Panel. He was co-chairman
of the National Council on Education Standards and Testing, and
director of the National Assessment Governing Board and of Achieve. Return to top
2002
— Robert P. Moses Founder of the Algebra Project, Robert P. Moses is a prime example
of how one concerned individual can help pioneer new approaches
to educating children. In 1982, Moses was invited by his daughter's
8th-grade teacher at the Martin Luther King School in Cambridge,
Massachusetts, to help several students who were struggling to learn
algebra. His success in producing the school's first students to
pass a citywide algebra examination and qualify for 9th-grade honors
geometry laid the groundwork for what is today known as the Algebra
Project. The Algebra Project, which has spread to 22 school districts
in 17 states, is an interactive curriculum and teacher-training
program designed to help disadvantaged inner-city and rural students
better understand abstract mathematical concepts. Moses taught math
in the New York City public schools from 1958 to 1961, was a civil-rights
organizer in Mississippi in the 1960s and worked for the Ministry
of Education in Tanzania from 1969 to 1975 before returning to the
United States to pursue doctoral studies in philosophy at Harvard
University. Moses, who was a MacArthur Fellow from 1982 through
1987, has received numerous public-service awards, and his work
has been featured in the national media. Return
to top
2001
— Fred ("Mister") Rogers For three
decades, Fred Rogers has provided this country and the world with
a shining example of how television can be a positive force in educating
and nurturing children. His half-hour PBS television series, Mister
Rogers' Neighborhood—the longest-running television program
on public television when it ended late 2001—has entertained,
educated and inspired parents, educators and children. Rogers attended
both the Pittsburgh Theological Seminary and the University of Pittsburgh's
Graduate School of Child Development. He was ordained as a Presbyterian
minister in 1963. In 1968, Rogers was appointed chairman of the
forum on Mass Media and Child Development of the White House Conference
on Youth. He has received Emmy Awards and many others throughout
his career. He chairs Family Communications, Inc.
Return
to top
2000
— John Goodlad Starting
as a teacher in a rural, one-room school in Canada, Goodlad since
has been involved in an array of education reform programs and projects,
and has engaged in large-scale studies of education change, schooling
and teacher education. At the age of 79, in addition to advancing
a comprehensive program of research and development directed to
the simultaneous renewal of schooling and teacher education, Goodlad
continues to inquire about education's mission in a democratic society.
He has authored, co-authored or edited more than 30 books and numerous
chapters, papers and articles; he also has received many distinguished
awards. Goodlad has taught at all grade levels and in a variety
of institutions. He is professor emeritus of education and co-director
of the Center for Educational Renewal at the University of Washington
in Seattle and president of the independent Institute for Educational
Inquiry. Return
to top
1999
— Frank Newman Newman has had an outstanding career in business
and education, with a national reputation as a leader for higher
education reform. He chaired the first U.S. Department of Health,
Education and Welfare task force on reforming higher education,
from which the 1971 "Newman Report" was issued. He then authored
"The Second Newman Report" with further recommendations for higher
education reform. Newman was president of ECS for 14 years before
leaving to serve as Distinguished Lecturer at Columbia University's
Teachers College and accept an appointment at Brown University's
Center for Public Policy and American Institutions. Before joining
ECS, he was president of the University of Rhode Island from 1974-83
and Presidential Fellow at the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement
of Teaching. Currently, Newman is Visiting
Professor of Public Policy and Project Director at the A. Alfred
Taubman Center for Public Policy and American Institutions at Brown
University, and director of The Futures Project: Policy for
Higher Education in a Changing World.
Return
to top
1998
— Robert Slavin The well-known
initiatives developed by Slavin (in partnership with his wife, Nancy
Madden) have garnered national attention for improving student achievement,
especially among at-risk children. Slavin's classroom beginnings
were as a special education teacher. From this experience, he developed
Success for All, which emphasizes the importance of reading, and
Roots and Wings, which tackles the entire school, from professional
development to accountability for results. Slavin now serves as
co-director of the Johns Hopkins University Center for Research
on the Education of Students Placed at Risk.
Return
to top
1997
— Claiborne Pell In 1972,
U.S. Senator Pell of Rhode Island authored and witnessed passage
of legislation that created Basic Educational Opportunity Grants,
renamed "Pell" grants to honor the senator. He also established
the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for
the Humanities. He initiated and helped pass many other specialized
bills in the areas of drunk driving, high-speed rail transportation
services, environmental education, libraries, historic preservation,
education for the handicapped and the economy. He has received honorary
doctorates from 50 colleges and universities and recorded some of
his insights in two books, Power and Policy and Megalopolis
Unbound. He also co-authored Challenge of the Seven Seas.
Return
to top
1996
— John W. Gardner Gardner
led a multi-faceted career, beginning as a psychology teacher at
the University of California and then serving with the Federal Communications
Commission and the U.S. Marine Corps. Gardner became president of
Carnegie Corporation and the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement
of Teaching in 1955. He was U.S. Secretary of Health, Education
and Welfare from 19965-68 before becoming chairman of the National
Urban Coalition. In 1970, Gardner founded Common Cause, a nonpartisan
citizens' group committed to lobbying elected officials on national
issues of mutual concern. He helped found and served as chairman
for Independent Sector, a national forum for volunteer organizations.
He has served as a consultant or member of many government agencies
and task forces, and has published many books and papers. Before his death at age 89 in February
2002, Gardner was a consulting professor at Stanford University's
School of Education in California.
Return
to top
1995
— Richard W. Riley Richard W. Riley was U.S. Secretary of Education
during the Clinton administration. A major accomplishment was passage
of the Education Improvement Act (EIA), an extensive program built
through a strong coalition of businesspeople, educators and parents.
Academic standards, testing, teaching, management, accountability,
business partnerships, school climate and higher education were
among the areas affected by this sweeping change. Riley also served
as South Carolina's governor for two terms and has been highly commended
for inspiring new thinking and taking bold actions that have led
to positive solutions for America's troubled education system. TheRichard
W. Riley College of Education at Rock Hill, South Carolina, is dedicated
to preparing education leaders who are committed to a lifelong quest
for excellence in teaching, learning and service to society.
Return
to top
1994
— Ernest Boyer Boyer
became president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement
of Teaching in 1979. He previously served as U.S. commissioner of
education and chancellor of the state university of New York and
held administrative posts in many of California's higher education
institutions. Additionally, he has been a senior fellow at several
universities and a Fulbright scholar to India and Chile. Boyer was
selected by his peers as the nation's leading educator (1983) and
named Educator of the Year by U.S. News and World Report (1990). Boyer died in 1995.
Return
to top
1993
— Wilhelmina Delco From 1974
until her retirement in January 1995, Delco served in the Texas
House of Representatives where she greatly influenced the area of
higher education. During the Clinton Administration, she was appointed
by U.S. Education Secretary Richard W. Riley as chairwoman of the
U.S. Department of Education's National Advisory Committee on Institutional
Quality and Integrity. She also was chairwoman of the Compact for
Faculty Diversity, a consortium of the New England Board of Education,
the Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education and the Southern
Regional Education Board.
Return
to top
1992
— Theodore R. Sizer Theodore R. Sizer is founder and
chairman of the Coalition of Essential Schools, a national network
of schools and centers engaged in restructuring and redesigning
schools to promote better student learning and achievement. He wrote Horace's Compromise (1985), Horace's School (1992)
and Horace's Hope (1996) which explore the ideas of the Essential
school reform effort. He is university professor emeritus at Brown
University where he served as chair of the Education Department
from 1984 to 1989. Before coming to Brown, Sizer was professor and
dean at the Harvard Graduate School of Education and headmaster
of Phillips (Andover) Academy. Sizer and his wife are co-authors
of the recently published book, The Students Are Watching: Schools
and the Moral Contract. He currently is teaching a course on
education policy at Brandeis University, as well as co-teaching
a secondary school design course with Nancy Faust Sizer at Harvard
University. Return
to top
1991
— James P. Comer Since 1968, Comer has been a Maurice Falk Professor
of Child Psychiatry at the Yale University School of Medicine's
Child Study Center, which aims to bridge child psychiatry and education.
He is perhaps best known for the founding of the Comer School Development
Program in 1968, which promotes the collaboration of parents, educators
and community to improve social, emotional and academic outcomes
for children that, in turn, helps them achieve greater school success.
Comer is a prolific writer and has authored seven books, more than
150 articles for Parents magazine and more than 300 syndicated
articles on children's health and development and race relations.
He has served as a consultant to the Children's Television Workshop,
which produces Sesame Street and Electric Company, and was a consultant
to the Public Committee on Mental Health chaired by Rosalyn Carter,
as well as a member of the National Board for Professional Teaching
Standards, Carnegie Forum on Education and the Economy. Since 1994,
Comer has served as a member of the National Commission on Teaching
and America's Future. He also has been associated with the National
Launch Committee for Americorps and the National Campaign to Reduce
Youth Violence. Comer has received many honorary degrees and awards
during his career.
Return
to top
1989
— Fred Hechinger Hechinger
has devoted much of his career as a reporter, columnist, editor,
author and foundation executive to issues of education and policies
affecting children and society. He has told education's story through
the pages of The Bridgeport (Connecticut) Herald, the Washington
Post, the New York Herald Tribune, the Bridgeport
Sunday Herald, the New York Times, The Saturday Review and Harper's, in addition to several books. Hechinger also taught
at the City University of New York and the New School for Social Research. He is a senior adviser at Carnegie Corporation
of New York. Hechinger died in 1995. Return
to top
1988
— Lamar Alexander Alexander,
former candidate for the U.S. presidency, has been governor of Tennessee,
president of the University of Tennessee and U.S. Secretary of Education.
He led the governors' state-by-state better schools survey, Time
for Results, and served as chairman of the task force that revised The Nation's Report Card. He also served for two years on
the National Assessment of Educational Progress board of directors.
Alexander is a Goodman Visiting Professor
of the Practice of Public Service at Harvard University. He lives in Nashville where he is
chairman of the Salvation Army Initiative to help families move
from welfare to work.
Return
to top
1987
— Marian Wright Edelman Founder and president of the Children's Defense
Fund (CDF), Edelman has been an advocate for disadvantaged Americans
for her entire professional life. She was the first black woman
admitted to the Mississippi Bar, founded the Washington Research
Project, a public-interest law firm and parent body of the CDF,
and has served as director of the Center for Law and Education at
Harvard University. Edelman has received many honorary degrees and
awards, including the Albert Schweitzer Humanitarian Prize, the
Heinz Award and a MacArthur Foundation Prize Fellowship. In 2000,
she received the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Robert F.
Kennedy Lifetime Achievement Award for her writings. Return
to top
1986
— Harold Howe II Howe began his career
as a history teacher, then became a principal and superintendent
of schools in Scarsdale, New York. He has been active in education
for more than 50 years and shows no sign of slowing his interest
or his pace. Howe was a U.S. Commissioner of Education under President
Lyndon Johnson. He also held positions at the Learning Institute
of North Carolina, the Ford Foundation, Duke University and Harvard
University's Graduate School of Education, from which he retired
in June 1994. At 82, when Howe pauses for a moment and says thoughtfully,
"I think the economic division in society is rapidly becoming
the most divisive force of all," it is clear that this deeply
generous and caring man is not flagging in his resolve to do what
he can to be part of the national conversation about improving society
in general and schooling in particular. Return
to top
1985
— Terrel Bell Bell is
best known for his leadership in establishing the National Commission
on Excellence in Education and his contributions to the commission's
report, A Nation at Risk. He served as U.S. secretary of
education; U.S. commissioner of education; superintendent of schools
in Utah, Wyoming and Idaho; administrator at Utah State University
and the University of Utah; and as a high school teacher. Bell worked
to transform schools into high-tech institutions, which he believed
was the next step needed to reform America's education system. He
died in 1996. Return
to top
1985
— David Gardner Gardner
has been president and vice president of the nine-campus University
of California, president of the University of Utah, and faculty
member and chancellor at the University of California's Santa Barbara
campus. In 1981, he chaired the National Commission on Excellence
in Education, whose 1983 report, A Nation at Risk, sparked
the national effort to improve and reform American education. Gardner
is president of the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and board
member and director of several organizations.
Return
to top
1984
— James B. Hunt Jr. Currently
an attorney in the firm of Womble, Carlyle, Sandridge & Rice,
Hunt served four terms as governor of North Carolina, and has been
at the forefront of education reform in his state and in the nation.
His Smart Start program received the prestigious Innovations in
American Government Award from the Ford Foundation and the John
F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. In 1985,
Hunt co-chaired with David Hamburg the "Committee of 50,"
which led to the Carnegie Forum on Education and the Economy and,
eventually, to the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards.
He also chairs the National Commission on Teaching and America's
Future at Stanford University and is on the Board of Trustees of
the Carnegie Corporation of New York.
Return
to top
1983
— Carl D. Perkins Perkins, a Kentucky Congressman from 1949 until
his death in 1984, chaired the highly influential House Education
and Labor Committee. In that post, he was responsible for landmark
education initiatives, including legislation supporting funding
for vocational education. The Carl D. Perkins Vocational and Technical
Education Act of 1998 was signed into law on October 31, 1998 and
became effective in July 1, 1999. Return
to top
1982
— John Brademas Brademas,
president emeritus of New York University (NYU), was NYU president
from 1981 to 1992. From 1959 to 1981, he served as a U.S. representative
from Indiana and earned a reputation for his leadership in education.
In Congress, Brademas was a member of the Education and Labor Committee
and chief architect of the International Education Act and National
Institute of Education. He also was a major sponsor of the Higher
Education Acts of 1972 and 1976. Under President Clinton's administration,
he was chairman of the Committee on the Arts and the Humanities,
was chairman of the National Endowment for Democracy and a member
of the Consultants' Panel to the Comptroller General of the United
States.
Return
to top
1981
— Terry Sanford Sanford,
ECS co-founder, became president emeritus of Duke University in
1985 and spent much of his professional life working to improve
the quality of America's education system. Sanford served as U.S.
senator, governor and state legislator in North Carolina, Children's
Television Workshop director, university president and attorney.
He died in 1998. Return
to top
1980
— Ralph Tyler According
to the Board of Directors of the National Society for the Study
of Education, "[Tyler's] distinguished services to education.[spanning]
more than six decades, and his remarkable achievements in many and
varied fields, will be noted elsewhere again and again. He leaves
a legacy that extends well beyond.education." In 1954, Tyler co-founded
and became first director of the Center for Advanced Study in the
Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University and served as such for
13 years. He died in February 1994.
Return
to top
1979
— Francis Keppel Born the
son of a Columbia College dean and Carnegie Corporation president,
Keppel spent all of his 73 years involved in education. His career
posts included dean of the Harvard University Graduate School of
Education, U.S. commissioner of education and assistant secretary
for Health, Education and Welfare. He also directed the Aspen Institute's
education policy program, and was overseer and senior lecturer at
Harvard University. Keppel died in 1990.
Return
to top
1978
— Joan Ganz Cooney Cooney,
co-founder of the Children's Television Workshop (CTW) and originator
of Sesame Street, served as CTW's president and chief executive
officer until 1990. She currently chairs the Sesame Workshop Board
and sits on several corporate boards. Cooney has been a member
of many special commissions and has received numerous awards for
her outstanding achievements. Cooney was awarded the Presidential
Medal of Freedom in 1995. Return
to top
1977
— Benjamin Mays Mays,
noted for his achievements in faculty development, civil rights
and combating declining enrollments, spent 27 years as president
of Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia; 12 years as president
of the Atlanta School Board; and six years as dean of the Howard
University School of Religion. He also was an English instructor
at the State College of South Carolina, an ordained Baptist minister
and author of several books. Mays died in 1984.
Return
to top