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Brewer Foundation Future Leaders Program and Dallas ISD Announce Long-Term Partnership


Some of Dallas’ most deserving students are receiving a big boost, as the Brewer Foundation Future Leaders Program (FLP) and the Dallas Independent School District (Dallas ISD) announced a renewed long-term partnership.

Effective immediately, a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between the two groups ensures the continuation of the FLP for at least another five years.

The FLP is an innovative public-private partnership that is the first of its kind ever offered in Texas. The program partners teachers and administrators from Dallas ISD with those from St. Mark’s School of Texas, The Hockaday School, Episcopal School of Dallas, and Greenhill School.

Founded in 2001 by the Brewer Foundation, the FLP is an academic and leadership development program that benefits nearly 250 students, ages 10 – 18, from urban communities within Dallas ISD and more than 60 FLP alumni attending college. Nearly 85 percent of all FLP participants are (or will be) first-generation college students. The FLP student enrollment is approximately 70 percent Latino and 25 percent African American. The program is offered at no cost to Dallas ISD student participants.

“This educational model supports our belief that, working together, we can make a difference in the lives of children from every urban community,” said William A. Brewer III, a founder of the FLP and chairman of its Advisory Board. “It is a privilege to continue the partnership with Dallas ISD – and to see that the FLP has become a national model for public-private partnerships in urban communities.”

The FLP was recently recognized as one of the leading programs of its kind by the National Partnership for Educational Access (NPEA). In April, the program was one of 25 featured organizations at a national conference at Wesleyan University focused on improving educational access for minority students.

“The FLP embraces the ideal that our city’s future is hugely impacted by opportunities offered to the students of Dallas ISD,” says Michael Hinojosa, Dallas ISD Superintendent. “This program proves that we can create opportunities for students to help ensure a bright future for each of them and for Dallas. Hopefully, this will inspire others to support our students in meaningful ways.”

FLP classes are offered weekly on the campuses of the program’s private school partners. Dallas ISD partner schools are primarily located in South Dallas, West Dallas and Oak Cliff.

The FLP curriculum is progressive in nature. Program participants attend Saturday classes during the school year that supplement their regular coursework in core subjects such as English, Technology, Mathematics, Computer Science, and Leadership.

As the students advance through the program, they receive instruction to prepare them for college entrance exams. They also receive counseling on the college admissions process, financial aid, and future career choices. A summer workshop for 9th – 12th graders focuses on leadership skills, writing, and building a personal “roadmap” for success in high school, college and life.

The FLP benefits from a dynamic management model. Public and private school administrators form an advisory board that works with FLP administrative staff from the Brewer Foundation. More than 50 public and private school teachers serve on the faculty. An 8:1 student-teacher ratio ensures that every student receives hands-on attention.

“The focus of the program is to prepare students for college in every facet of their life,” says Brittany H. Brady, executive director of the program. “By beginning our work with students during their formative years, we help instill in them the belief that are destined to achieve great things.”

The real measure of the FLP’s success is its graduates who attend accredited, four-year colleges and universities. To date, 142 FLP alumni have received more than $11 million in scholarship offers and 616 college acceptances. FLP graduates have attended colleges such as New York University, Colby College, Amherst College, The University of Texas at Austin, Pomona College, and Southern Methodist University, to name a few.

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