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Laurene Powell Jobs’ $100 million incentive for a new kind of school

The philanthropist doubles her commitment to reinvent education.

Laurene Powell Jobs, widow of late Apple co-founder and CEO Steve Jobs, is planning to redesign high school education by awarding $100 million to 10 schools in the U.S.
Laurene Powell Jobs, widow of late Apple co-founder and CEO Steve Jobs, is planning to redesign high school education by awarding $100 million to 10 schools in the U.S.
Stephen Lam/Getty Images

Laurene Powell Jobs announced this week that she is increasing her commitment to redesign high school education by awarding $100 million to 10 schools in the U.S.

That’s $10 million a piece for the schools picked for the XQ: The Super School Project. The awardees include a school that will hold classes on a barge floating on the Mississippi River, another based out of a museum and a charter school designed to keep homeless youth from missing out on their education during times of instability.

Powell Jobs, a philanthropist and the widow of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, was inspired to increase the number of awardees from five to 10 after she and her team worked with the schools over the last year. When Powell Jobs started this initiative last year, she promised $50 million to educators who could create innovate learning environments for students.

“High school hasn’t been reinvented in over 100 years,” she told Marketplace’s Amy Scott at the time. “It was designed for early 20th-century workforce needs. In the last 100 years, the rest of our world has changed radically, but schools have not. And workforce needs have changed radically.”

She said 65 percent of students in school today will have jobs that have yet to be created. Listen to more of her thoughts on reinventing education by clicking the audio player below.

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