Yass Prize finalist receives prestigious national award for outstanding educational innovation.
Dec. 14, 2023 (NEW YORK, NY) – Yesterday, the National Fellowship for Black and Latino Male Educators, was named a finalist for the coveted Yass Prize and won a $500,000 STOP Award for Sustainable, Transformational, Outstanding and Permissionless education at the third annual Yass Prize Celebration and Gala in Midtown Manhattan.
The Yass Prize, known as the Pulitzer of Education Innovation, seeks, rewards and celebrates innovative organizations trying to break the cycle of ineffective education that is failing students across the country. As one of nine finalists selected from a pool of 33 semifinalists, the National Fellowship for Black and Latino Male Educators received its award to accelerate its mission and to change the underrepresentation of Black and Latino male educators in this country.
“We know giving education innovators the opportunity to work outside the system that is suffocating so many of them is the most effective way to transform the lives of America’s students,” said Janine Yass, who co-founded the Yass Prize with her husband Jeff in 2021.
When the Covid crisis revealed and magnified the vast inequities that surround a majority of our students, they pivoted in their education investments to speed up the pace of improving student lives.
“The kind of disruption that the awardees are causing in American education is remarkable,” said Jeanne Allen of the Center for Education Reform whose organization manages the Yass Prize effort. “National Fellowship for Black and Latino Male Educators is among the very best of American endeavors in education.”
This year’s grand prize winner with the $1 million Yass Prize was Valiant Cross Academy from Montgomery, Alabama. Valiant Cross, National Fellowship of Black and Latino Male Educators, and the rest of the finalists were selected for most exemplifying each of the Yass Prize’s four core STOP principles: Sustainable, Transformational, Outstanding, and Permissionless education.
“We are truly grateful for this award. We will use it to increase our transformational efforts across other cities and throughout the Yass Prize community of innovators to create and sustain school leadership opportunities for Black and Latino males,” said Keith Brooks, Founder and CEO, National Fellowship for Black and Latino Male Educators. “Thank you to Janine and Jeff Yass for selecting us as a finalist.”
The remaining 23 Yass Prize semifinalists each received a $200,000 STOP Award. Additionally, Florida-based Indi-Ed won the $100,000 Parents Choice Award, a new initiative determined through the 65,000 votes cast from parents and others closest to the students of each semifinalist.
“This year’s awardees exemplify the best of American endeavors in education,” said Jeanne Allen, who heads up the Yass Prize and related initiatives. “We are proud to welcome the National Fellowship for Black and Latino Male Educators into the Yass Prize network, which provides growth, coaching, mentorship, and training opportunities to support our members’ continued growth.”For more information on National Fellowship for Black and Latino Male Educators and the other Yass Prize awardees, visit: YassPrize.org/Awardees
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