ap

Skip to content
Author
PUBLISHED:
Getting your player ready...

Joining the chorus of those concerned about the 49 percent dropout rate of Denver public high schools, the communications giant AT&T has given $500,000 to two organizations focused on getting kids through high school.

Denver Kids Inc. received a four-year commitment from AT&T of $100,000 per year to track and counsel 100 ninth-grade kids thought to be at risk for dropping out.

The Denver Scholarship Foundation, started by Tim and Bernadette Marquez’s $50 million challenge grant for Dener Public Schools graduates, received $100,000 from AT&T, which will be matched by the Marquez trust. Executive director Cindy Abramson said the $200,000 will be used not just for scholarships but also for resource centers that have been established in 10 DPS high schools.

The centers teach students about colleges, about life in college or other secondary schools, about getting into them and how to apply for scholarships.

They’ve had strong results in just three years. Lincoln High School, where Gov. Bill Ritter announced the grants Friday morning, put 114 graduates into college in 2005. A resource center was established there the following year, and the 2008 graduating class saw 184 go on to college, a 61 percent increase, Abramson said, giving equal credit to programs instituted by principal Antonio Esquibel.

Denver Kids, a 63-year-old nonprofit, targets 1,000 kids in DPS who are at risk for dropping out, from kindergartners through seniors. This money will be used to work with 100 students in ninth grade, which research shows is the most critical year for dropout intervention. Lincoln has 15 ninth- graders in the program.

“Each student costs us $1,000 for a year,” said Vickie Pucchi, vice president for development. “Because this grant is for four years, it will enable us to work with these 100 kids all the way through high school.

“To have sustained four-year funding is very unique, particularly in this economy,” she said.

The grants are part of AT&T’s commitment to give $100 million over the next two years to schools and nonprofits focused on getting kids to finish high school and enter the workforce.

RevContent Feed

More in News