|
EDUCATION LAW CENTER LAUNCHES NATIONAL
INITIATIVE
MOLLY HUNTER TO LEAD EDUCATION JUSTICE
Newark, NJ -- January 15, 2008
Education Law Center (ELC) today launched a new, expanded
national initiative on behalf of public school children
Education Justice as announced by ELC Executive
Director David Sciarra. Education Justice (EdJustice) at ELC
will support advocates, policymakers, attorneys and others,
in states across the nation, who are working to strengthen
and improve public schools, especially those schools serving
low-income and minority students.
"We are fortunate to have Molly Hunter joining us to
develop and lead EdJustice at ELC," Sciarra said, "and
Ellen Boylan will continue our highly successful national
preschool project, Starting
at 3." In fact, EdJustice will rely on the
Starting at 3 model and expand it to other quality education
issues.
Sciarra also noted Hunters substantial experience on
school funding reform and litigation, education cost studies,
and school finance accountability. "Molly is one of the
nations most respected experts and analysts on a range
of critical issues facing our public schools today, especially
those serving poor students and those with special needs."
EdJustice will develop a national program to advance education
equity and plans to advocate for: better preK-12 school funding
and facilities; implementation of proven educational reforms;
and, policies that help schools build the know-how to narrow
and close achievement gaps. As ELC has done for 35 years in
New Jersey, EdJustice will be assisting advocates to "stand
up for public schools students in their states and across
the nation," Hunter said.
EdJustice plans to collaborate with existing organizations
that work for equal educational opportunity, such as the Campaign
for Educational Equity, the Public Education Network, the
Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights under Law, and the Rural
School and Community Trust, among others. "One of our
first collaborations will begin immediately," Hunter
said, "as we plan a Quality Education Conference in Washington,
DC, this June." The conference brings together school
finance litigators and other advocates who seek to strengthen
public schools and keep them public.
On December 18th, Sciarra and Kurt Landgraf, President of
Educational Testing Service (ETS) of Princeton announced
an agreement for sustained collaboration between
the two organizations to support ELC in taking "the first
steps toward a nationwide expansion of its current advocacy
efforts on behalf of underserved students in New Jersey."
ETS will provide financial support and assistance for ELCs
national initiatives, and ELC will help ETS advance its groundbreaking
research and policy agenda aimed at closing the nations
achievement gap. The first collaboration between the two organizations
will be a May 21-22, 2008 ETS symposium on School Finance
and the Achievement Gap: Funding Programs that Work.
|
Education
Law Center Press Contacts:
Molly Hunter, Esq.
Director, Education Justice
email: mhunter@edlawcenter.org
voice: 973 624-1815 x19
|
Chantelle Brown
Fundraising and Event Coordinator
email: cbrown@edlawcenter.org
voice: 973 624-1815 x12
|
Copyright © 2008 Education Law Center.
All Rights Reserved.
|