Creating economic opportunities through education – Core Principles Microsoft Shape the Future
Feb 26, 2016
Creating economic opportunities through education – Core Principles
Microsoft Shape the Future
Seattle’s ‘Great Student’ InitiativeUplifting Children & Eliminating the Digital Divide
Ensuring That All Seattle Students and their Families Can be a Part of the ‘Digital Society’
Increase the city’s economic growth &
competitiveness
Create tomorrow’s jobs
Develop new skills for the future
WHY: Home access to education technology creates jobs, drives economic growth and increases the city’s competitiveness
HOW: By reducing digital exclusion among students and their families to tackle some of the city’s most pressing challenges
WHAT: A public/private partnership to deliver broadband, PC, training and city services to digitally excluded Seattle families
From Vision to Outcomes• Seattle can announce that every public school family can receive a world
class education through the city’s commitment to digital inclusion for all students – and Seattle will lead the nation in this effort
• The cost to a family will vary by their economic ability – and be tied to Free Lunch eligibility with subsidies & financing making the program accessible to all
• A partnership between public, private and non-profit organizations will create a more affordable solution, with higher relevance, training and support and with greater accessibility to all Seattle families
• Seattle will serve as a national model for developing smart and sustainable digital inclusion initiatives that can enable all US cities and all citizens to participate in the digital society
Who Will Benefit?Students, Parents & Educators – and Seattle• Parental involvement can be increased through the effective use of technology in
teaching and learning• Educators can more efficiently communicate with parents and students using
technology • Addressing the ‘Digitally Excluded’ unlocks Seattle Public Schools’ existing
technology, content and learning investments so that all students can use them• ‘Digitally Excluded’ students can end up creating a ‘Multiplier Effect’ of issues the
City ultimately has to take responsibility for:- More likely to drop out of school- More likely to have encounters with law enforcement- More likely to have significant and long term social support needs- More likely to have parents who need workforce training assistance- More likely to require unemployment benefits- More likely to need local e-Services… and least likely to be able to access them
5 Key Steps to Developing a Solution
Map to the Policy
Create the Program
Build the Partnerships
Identify the Solutions
Deliver, Support & Measure
“EDUCATION TECHNOLOGY IS A
VITAL PART OF CREATING JOBS AND
ECONOMIC GROWTH”
“THE GREAT STUDENT
INITIATIVE”
PARTNERS,
PC, SOFTWARE, INTERNET, TRAINING,
SKILLS, SUPPORT AND SERVICES
DEVICES AND HOME BROADBAND FOR SEATTLE’S FREE LUNCH STUDENTS
1
4
32
5
What is the impact?Social, economic and competitive – while transcending education• Access to quality education becomes a fundamental right, not a privilege for all Americans• Technology can enable equity for the underserved and disadvantaged• Having a digitally literate community improves economic opportunities, social engagements and builds
stronger tax bases through higher-paying jobs• Skilled workforces create competitive advantages for states and cities• Public Private Partnerships can be directed to any audience that can make an impact in a city’s efficiencies,
level of service or policies for inclusion:- Education: Providing teachers, families and students with access to PCs to enable home and school use
through subsidized purchases of technology- Entrepreneurs: Helping entrepreneurs gain access to affordable technology and training which can
increase their productivity and contribution to the local economy- eGovernment: Helping state and city government agencies ensure that citizens have the necessary
technology to access online solutions- eHealth: Building digital skills and access for public health professionals while improving citizen access
to health information and services- Seniors: Helping aging citizens become comfortable with technology so that they can access
government health benefits, find new learning opportunities, maintain independent living, and connect with extended family and friends
CMS Investment Study Group Report:
Project L.I.F.T.(Leadership & Investment For Transformation)
• Avg. college grad will earn $1M more over their lifetime compared to a high school dropout!• Over $60K in lost North Carolina taxes per dropout over their lifetime
Aver
age
year
ly
earn
ings
Bottom Line: The more you learn, the more you earn
High school dropouts today have 3.5x the unemployment rate of college graduates
Education = Employment = Opportunity
Une
mpl
oym
ent
Rate
92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09
Proposed 5 Year Investments
*Average. incremental resources per student/per year: ~$1500
Investment Area Per Year 5 Year Total
Talent $2.3M $11.5MTime $6.0M $30.0MTechnology $.6M $3.0MCommunity Support $1.6M $8.0MSchool Environment Enhancements
In-kind In-kind
Management $.5M $2.5MTotal Investment $11.0M $55.0M