Home   |   ACE Blog   |   Contact

Posts Tagged ‘latest news’

ACE is “a model for the nation” says Mitt Romney

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

romney-speaking

Mitt Romney speaking to 1,000 guests at the ACE luncheon

Today, close to 1,000 business leaders met in downtown Denver to celebrate ACE’s 10th anniversary and hear from former Governor and presidential candidate Mitt Romney, who called ACE “a model for the nation.”

“What you’ve accomplished here … is really a remarkable thing,” Romney continued. “I believe you’re going to find in this country more and more people who stand up to the forces that oppose choices in our schools, and recognize that choice and competition is good for our kids, and kids should come first.”

“These principles of choice and competition are making a difference, and they will make a difference across the entire nation. It’s a job we’ve got to get done.”

excel-kids

Students for ACE partner school Excel Institute perform the national anthem.

ACE founder Alex Cranberg also addressed the audience, as did former Governor Bill Owens and Chairman of the Board Ralph Nagel.

But despite the influential business leaders who spoke, it was a college student who stole the show. Richard Vidal is a former ACE scholar who will graduate from Colorado School of Mines this December with a double major in Mechanical Engineering and Business/Economics.

ACE Alumnus Richard Vidal

ACE Alumnus Richard Vidal

Richard was several years behind grade level before he entered his ACE private middle school. Through hard work and a safe and structured environment, Richard built an academic foundation that has led to his current - and future - success. He credits those tough years working to catch up with his classmates as motivation for his success in college.

Soon Richard will realize his dream of working in the oil and gas industry, as he already has job offers from Shell, ConocoPhillips and ExxonMobil.

“Your support of me was not wasted,” Richard told the 1,000 attentive guests. “And it is not wasted on the hundreds of other ACE kids.”

Richard will serve as the Chairman of the ACE Alumni Board that will seek to identify other successful former ACE scholars and get them more engaged in the mission and vision of ACE.

“Today there are thousands of children who are several years behind grade level, just like I was. Please take a chance on them, like you once took a chance on me.”

2010 Graduation Rate - 93%

Saturday, May 1st, 2010

For the past decade ACE has increased graduation rates among Colorado low-income kids. When provided access to quality schools, and given a choice, kids can excel.

This year was no exception.

The Class of 2010 posted a 93% graduation rate! This compares to low-income graduation rates of 49% in Denver and 57% in Aurora.

What’s more, ACE kids graduate ready for college. 100% of ACE’s 2009 graduates are still in college today, and every single 2010 grad has specific plans to attend college.

We’re closing the achievement gap. What does this mean?

A high school diploma can improve the quality of life, and our entire state economy and society. Research shows that high school dropouts cost communities $2 million over their lifetimes when factoring decreased earning potential, increased reliance on government assistance and increased likelihood of spending time in prison.

In Colorado, 61% of the 21,178 low-income students who should have graduated in 2009 actually earned a diploma

Meet Angel

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

angel-blog-pic

Five year old Angel tells us that the best thing about his ACE school is “learning art and music and playing basketball with my friends during P.E. We even went to a Nuggets game a long time ago.” (That’s Kindergarten-speak for early last season.)

“I used to have a dog named Chulo,” he continues, “but he died and I was very sad.” It seems this five-year-old has endured more than his share of sadness. “He had an older brother who died and there’s never been any mention of his dad,” explains his teacher. Angel’s way of expressing how he copes is that, “My mom puts band-aids on me.”

“Angel had problems with social skills and fear when he arrived” says his principal, “but he has responded very well to the counseling that our staff provides.” It must be helping, because today he lights up as he says, “I like my school ‘cause I have lots of friends here.”

It seems that Angel’s mom has also struggled – with the ACE requirement to match her half of his tuition. But that has only motivated her to, “check with his teachers nearly every day to be sure Angel is doing his work,” says the principal. “And actually, I think it may be that mom feels safe here too.”

We ask Angel what he wants to be when he grows up, to which he confidently replies, “President!” Well, a quality education might prove useful.

Marching for their future

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

A colleague sent us this powerful photograph from a recent march in Florida. Thousands of parents, children and educators marching for school choice.

They marched to support a bill that will strengthen Florida’s tax credit scholarship program, that provides funds to low-income families to attend one of 1,300 qualified private schools. There are currently 28,000 students taking advantage of these scholarships.

on-the-march-in-fl

Defeat of tax credits to attend private school

Monday, March 8th, 2010

denver-post

The Denver Post carried an op-ed online by ACE’s Executive Director Norton Rainey on the defeat of a tax credit bill that would have given low-income families access to quality private schools.

ACE Welcomes Mitt Romney to Denver!

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

romney

ACE has lots to celebrate during its Tenth Anniversary this year, and we can think of no better way than with a special luncheon with former Governor and presidential candidate Mitt Romney!

Governor Romney is a great advocate of school choice, and we are honored to have him join us for this one-time luncheon in support of ACE.


This luncheon is proudly brought to you by the Luncheon Host Committee and presented by our generous sponsors:


tmglogo_0310_updatedeksh-logo-jpegredwellsfargo

ACE 10th Anniversary Spring Luncheon with

Governor Mitt Romney

Thursday, May 27, 2010

12 PM - 1:30 PM

Denver Marriott City Center

To RSVP visit www.acescholarships.org/romney

There is a cost to attend; visit our online registration page for details


Like us, Governor Romney recognizes the social and economic benefits to improving graduation rates and producing a well-educated workforce. He knows that our financial well being tomorrow depends on the quality of our education system today.


So please consider joining us for what should be an exciting celebration. This will be a unique opportunity to hear one of our nation’s leading policy experts discuss the critical issue of reforming our public school system so every child has access to a quality school.


Attendees will receive a complimentary, autographed copy of Governor Romney’s new book just released today, “No Apology: The Case for American Greatness.”


We look forward to seeing you as we celebrate ten years of providing hope to at-risk children!

Seating is limited for this one-time event, so please visit our online registration page at

www.acescholarships.org/romney; all proceeds benefit ACE, a 501(c)(3), and donations are tax deductible to the extent allowed under the law.

School Choice Bill Killed

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

Yesterday the House Committee on Finance considered HB 10-1296, sponsored by Representative Spencer Swalm and Senator Josh Penry. Norton Rainey, ACE executive director testified in support of the bill, as did Jacque Graham, Principal at Inner City School and Theresa Gallegos, the mother of an ACE scholar.

The idea behind HB 1296 came from former U.S. Senator Hank Brown, and it would provide low-income families with an annual $1,000 tax credit for enrolling their child in a private school. The bill would also provide a grant of $1,000 to any public school that loses a student to a private school as a consequence of the tax credit.

Regrettably, the bill was killed on a Party line vote, six to five.

It is unfortunate, as the bill would have given low-income families a tremendous financial incentive to send their child to a private school, reduced public school class sizes as more children took advantage of the tax credit, and provided public schools with a $1,000 grant to help them give the children that remain behind a better quality education.

The bill would have even had a positive fiscal impact on our state, with a savings of $4.9 million in the first year, $8.7 million in the second year, and as much as $36 million in ten years, according to the official fiscal note prepared by Legislative Council.

It’s hard to imagine rejecting a bill that would do so much:

  • Provide a much-needed financial benefit to low-income families;
  • Allow low-income children to attend quality private schools;
  • Support public schools with a $1,000 grant for not teaching a child who left for private school;
  • Save the State of Colorado millions of dollars during one of the worst recessions in our history and at a time when the Legislature is proposing to cut K-12 education spending.

During the hearing several comments stood out as particularly alarming:

  • The full-time lobbyist for the Colorado Education Association (the teacher’s union) testified against the bill, stating that the legislation “doesn’t support public education.” This statement perfectly sums up what is wrong with the CEA. The lobbyist was right that the bill’s intent was not to support public education, even though it would have provided each school $1,000 for every child they lost. The bill was intended to support children, not the bureaucracy of our public education system… and shouldn’t that be the point?

  • Other representatives who voted “no” agreed with the CEA lobbyist, saying the bill “undermined” public education. It’s hard to imagine that giving a public school $1,000 for every child that leaves their school would be seen as undermining public schools. After all, most of the children who would choose to leave would do so because the public school wasn’t effective. Talk about rewarding failure!

While it was frustrating to watch this bill go down in defeat, ACE was proud to support the bill and share with the committee some of the amazing things that are happening through this organization. ACE will continue to provide these low-income children with immediate relief from failing public schools, and we will continue to support efforts to extend school choice to every child in Colorado.

Meet Alberto

Friday, January 15th, 2010

alberto-webAlberto, a highly focused second grader, tells us that someday he wants to be a “fireman because they rescue people, or maybe a policeman who catches bad guys… and,” as he changes gears with a grin, “I have a pet scorpion.”

His ACE teacher describes him as, “Amazing; very smart and always prepared. He’s up at 4 a.m. to arrive ready for school.” For Alberto, “the best thing about school is the learning, and my favorite class is science because we learn about nature [which may explain the scorpion] and I also want to be a geologist ‘cause I like cool rocks.”

Alberto speaks nearly flawless English and Spanish (required in his bilingual school) and sports a better-than-second-grade command of Mestizo, a centuries-old blend of Portuguese and French, which he learned on his own.

Yet the deeper reality behind these eyes is that Alberto has lived most of his seven years in local shelters with his single mom – a stark contrast to the stable and secure world found within the doors of his ACE private school.

A Decade of Service

Monday, January 4th, 2010

Ten years ago several business leaders, including Alex Cranberg, Charlie Gallagher, Ed McVaney, John Saeman and myself, joined together to form a non-profit organization out of a growing concern for the quality of education being offered to Colorado’s low-income communities, particularly in inner-city Denver.

More kids were dropping out than graduating; far fewer were going on to college. So the Alliance for Choice in Education was formed one decade ago this year to give choice to children who ordinarily have none.

Middle- and high-income families have educational choice: they either move to neighborhoods with good public schools or pay private school tuition. Low-income parents don’t have that luxury. Their children attend the government assigned, neighborhood school, whether it’s a good school, or not; whether the educational environment suits their child’s learning style, or not; whether that school will prepare their child for the future, or not.

For ten years ACE has provided a lifeline to these kids, offering them a chance to start anew in a private school of their choosing. The results has been consistently higher graduation rates, higher ACT scores, higher college-acceptance rates, more satisfied parents and more confident children.

After more than 6,000 scholarships totaling more than $15 million, we feel more empowered than ever to continue applying pressure to the status-quo; to continue rejecting the notion that some children can’t learn; to continue leveling the playing field for at-risk kids and providing them with an opportunity to learn in a safe and structured environment.

A decade of service is indeed a milestone that should be celebrated, but it pales in comparison to the hundreds of milestones ACE kids have reached throughout the years – the first in their family to graduate from high school; the first to attend college; the first to reject the temptations of their troubled communities and strive for something greater.

Many years ago (I won’t say how many), I was the first in my family to graduate from college. My life was forever changed by the opportunities that opened up to me. Ultimately that’s the mission of ACE – to change kid’s lives through education.

Thank you for your support these past ten years. Here’s to another great decade.

Ralph Nagel
Chairman of the Board

Spreading His Wings

Friday, December 11th, 2009

The Denver Nuggets’ soaring star, Chris “Birdman” Andersen continues his work giving back to the Denver community.

ACE will be at the Nuggets home game vs. the Phoenix Suns tomorrow night and will be presented with a check from Birdman and the Arby’s Foundation that will directly assist more low-income children.

A HUGE thank you to Birdman, his agent Mark Bryant, and Geoff and Kendall Bailey from Arby’s.

birdman-back