Oprah's Best Christmas Gift Ever
She Donated $365,000 To Atlanta Private School In One Of The City's Poorest Neighborhoods
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Students and teachers at the Ron Clark Academy celebrate Wednesday, Dec. 31, 2008, after hearing that Oprah Winfrey donated $365,000 to the private school in one of Atlanta's poorest neighborhoods. (AP PHOTO/DORIE TURNER)
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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.
In her letter to Clark, Winfrey calls him a role model and applauds the "profound difference you're making with your passion for teaching."
Representatives for Winfrey did not immediately return calls for comment.
The check was issued by the Oprah Winfrey Foundation, which gave $4 million to educational programs in 2008, said foundation executive director Caren Yanis.
The check was issued by the Oprah Winfrey Foundation, which gave $3.5 million to educational programs in 2006, according to the latest data available online.
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 networks 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.
By Dorie Turner
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- Oprah is to be commended for contributing to the school. Times are tough and donations are probably down for everyone. However, I''''ve been following Oprah''''s contributions for a while now. Notice how all the kids are black? Can you say "Racist"?
I am not a prejudiced person but I do not like seeing prejudice in any sort. And I''''ve noticed where Oprah''''s contributions go.
Posted by jdohio49 at 01:11 PM : Jan 01, 2009
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While I understand your point, how many white folks do you know making donations to black low-income schools here in the U.S.? My guess is not many. So then, if not Oprah, who can we count on to step for schools like these? It would be nice if everyone who donated was "color blind", but sadly, that''s just not how it is. - Reply to this comment
- Oprah is to be commended for contributing to the school. Times are tough and donations are probably down for everyone. However, I''ve been following Oprah''s contributions for a while now. Notice how all the kids are black? Can you say "Racist"?
I am not a prejudiced person but I do not like seeing prejudice in any sort. And I''ve noticed where Oprah''s contributions go. - Reply to this comment
- I say good for Oprah. that''s kind of her, but maybe I''m missing the point here or just really out of touch. The cost to go to this school is $14,000 a year. If you have classes of 10 pupils (which there are probably more) that''s $140,000 to run a classroom for 9 months a year. To me that sounds like a lot of money to spend on a music instructor.
Colleges are the same problem. When you have an auditorium full of biology 101 students, each paying $1000+ for tuition AND another $200 for books and the dead cat to disect, somebody is being downright greedy.
Sort of like medical expenses. Nobody can really justify the reason why it should $100 for an office visit where you only see the dr. 5 minutes before writing a perscription for penicillin, it just does. - Reply to this comment
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