Milken Family Foundation

Coordinates: 34°01′04″N 118°29′49″W / 34.0177631°N 118.4969884°W / 34.0177631; -118.4969884
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by ChrisGualtieri (talk | contribs) at 02:32, 20 October 2013 (General Fixes, removed stub tag using AWB). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Milken Family Foundation
AbbreviationMFF
Formation1982
TypePrivate foundation
Purposeeducation and medical research
HeadquartersSanta Monica, California
Coordinates34°01′04″N 118°29′49″W / 34.0177631°N 118.4969884°W / 34.0177631; -118.4969884
Region served
Global
Official language
English
Chairman & Co-Founder
Lowell Milken
Co-Founder
Michael Milken
Executive Vice President
Richard Sandler
Key people
Lawrence Lesser, Jane Foley, Ralph Finerman, Bonnie Somers, Susan M. Fox, Joni Milken-Noah, Gary Panas
Main organ
Board of Trustees
Websitewww.mff.org

The Milken Family Foundation is a private foundation established by Lowell Milken and Michael Milken in 1982. Lowell Milken serves as chairman and co-founder of the foundation.

Goals

The foundation is focused primarily on supporting education and medical research.

Among the foundation's initiatives are:

  • The Milken Educator Awards, a teacher recognition program awarding $25,000 to individual educators for teaching excellence;
  • TAP: The System for Teacher and Student Advancement, a comprehensive school reform incorporating career advancement, collaborative professional development, teacher accountability and performance-based compensation;
  • Milken Archive of Jewish Music, a cultural and historic project dedicated to preserving the diverse body of sacred and secular music inspired by 350 years of Jewish life in America;
  • The Lowell Milken Center, an institution dedicated to the development of educational projects that feature unsung heroes as role models to 'repair the world.' Howard Cohen, Chancellor of Purdue University/Calumet, said about the LM Center: “History is not history until it is written or told. This is what you are doing so well with your unsung hero projects.”
  • Milken-University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education Education Business Plan Competition - Education entrepreneurs from early-stage start-ups compete in the competition, which features seven prizes totaling $145,000 in funding. In addition to the prizes, all Competition finalists are invited to participate in the Education Design Studio Fund (EDSF), a fund initiative created in collaboration with Penn GSE.
2010 Milken Educator Award winners receive their awards at the Educator Forum

The Milken Educator Awards has created a network of more than 2,400 teachers who have served as resources to policymakers, researchers, the media and general public on their subject areas.

The TAP system was profiled in Education Week for its comprehensive approach to school reform.[1] The Center for American Progress released "Aligned by Design," a report by education researcher Craig Jerald that elaborated on this concept to specifically show how TAP's elements work together.[2] South Carolina TAP was featured in TIME Magazine's February 2008 cover story.[3] In 2006, BusinessWeek ranked TAP on its Top 10 List of Best Practices.[4]

TAP's operating organization, the National Institute for Excellence in Teaching collaborates with other national education groups on teacher effectiveness issues. More than ten organizations co-wrote Creating a Successful Performance Compensation System for Educators, which lays out the essentials for an effective, comprehensive reform system.[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ TAP: More Than Performance Pay
  2. ^ "Aligned by Design,"
  3. ^ Wallis, Claudia (February 13, 2008). "How to Make Great Teachers". Time. Retrieved February 15, 2013.
  4. ^ Top 10 List of Best Practices
  5. ^ Creating a Successful Performance Compensation System for Educators

External links