Giving Kids a Sense of the PossibleBill Wall MPA 1991/JD 1991
Growing up
in Charlestown, Massachusetts, the scene of both the worst turmoil of
Bostons busing crisis in the mid-1970s, and the most famous fights
of the American Revolution nearly 200 years before, Bill Wall MPA 1991/JD
1991 developed an appreciation for education. He knows firsthand that
kids need to have a sense of the possible. Education
gave me a way to move on, and Im very grateful for that, he
says. I grew up a poor kid in the city during the busing days when
education came to a halt. Many of the kids I grew up with didnt
go to college, never mind law school or graduate school. Wall decided
to blaze his own trail, starting with his acceptance to Boston Latin School
the oldest public high school in the country and considered by
many to be one of the best. Despite his
own experience in public schools and his dedication to public schools
in general, however, Wall doesnt question his involvement with the
Renaissance School, one
Wall has
been involved with the Renaissance School from the very beginning, from
helping with the charter school application to evaluating its budget and
finances, from hiring the president to generally keeping the school
on the straight and narrow. About four years ago, he joined the
board, a The
Kennedy School is great for that, teaching you to try new things to improve
communities. And working with the Renaissance School is my way of doing
that, says Wall. Youd
imagine that his day job as managing director of Fidelity Capital, where
he runs a leveraged buyout group, would be enough to keep him busy. But
Wall knew something had to be done to provide a level playing field for
students in Boston, since there are only so many seats available in the
citys two exam schools Boston Latin School and Boston Latin
Academy. He wants to help provide an option for those kids who cant
get into the best schools in Boston. Seven
or eight years ago, morale was down in the public schools, and something
had to be done to help Bostons inner-city youth, says Wall.
Opportunities for poor kids at private schools were few and far
between, and the politics of the Boston Public School system was stifling
innovation in education. Without a school committee, politics is furthermost
from our minds at the Renaissance School. Providing a quality Providing
a decent educational environment is one of Instead of creaming off the best students, weve found guidance counselors sending troubled students our way, he says. Maybe the Renaissance School could join the Boston Public School system one day, when Boston is prepared to offer a wide range of programs. Its getting close, but the citys not there yet. Aine Cryts |
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