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Nínive Clements Calegari

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Nínive Clements Calegari is the co-founder of 826 National and the founding executive director of 826 Valencia where she also served on the board of directors[1]. 826 Valencia and the seven other related chapters of 826 National are a group of non-profit writing centers for students ages 6–18.

Ninive is also the founder and President of The Teacher Salary Project[2], a non-profit designed to build the political will necessary to transform how our society values effective teachers. The project will use film, the internet, and the general public to communicate its mission. The Teacher Salary Project's film, American Teacher, will premiere in May of 2011.

In 2008, Ninive was appointed by San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom to the San Francisco Arts Commission[3]. She also served on the boards of Learning Points Associates, which has become the American Institutes for Research[4], and serves as an advisor to the George Lucas Education Foundation[5].

Ninive is a veteran public school teacher who has had ten years of classroom experience. Before teaching in her family's hometown in Mexico, Nínive worked at Leadership High School, San Francisco's first charter school, where she also served on the Board of Directors. Nínive went to Santa Catalina School and graduated in 1989[6], later going to Middlebury College to receive her bachelors degree and a Masters in Teaching and Curriculum from the Harvard Graduate School of Education.

Nínive is coauthor with Dave Eggers and Daniel Moulthrop of Teachers Have It Easy: The Big Sacrifices and Small Salaries of America's Teachers (The New Press, 2005),[7] which argues that increasing teachers' salaries is a critical piece to meaningful school reform and essential to making sure that our students consistently get the quality teachers they deserve.[8]

In 2007, Ninive received Edutopia's 2007 Daring Dozen award.[9] She has been the recipient of an NEH Fellowship, the William Coe Award for study at Stanford, the Andrew Mellon Fellowship, and most recently The Jim Henson Community Honor, 2010, for her work with 826 National.[10]

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