Equity Schools
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Equity Schools is a Chicago-based
benefit corporation In business, and only in United States corporate law, a benefit corporation (or in some states, a public benefit corporation) is a type of for-profit corporate entity whose goals include making a positive impact on society. Laws concerning ...
focused on solving capital and operational funding problems for schools, businesses, and other organizations. They primarily work with public, private, charter, and independent schools, and are known for using various non-conventional funding methods, or nonlinear project funding. The firm was founded in 2001 by its current president Richard R. Murray, who is most known for his invention of the corporate work study program used by the
Cristo Rey Network The Cristo Rey Network is a not-for-profit organization founded in 2000 to increase the number of schools modeled after Cristo Rey Jesuit High School in Chicago, which was founded in 1996 to prepare youth from low-income families for post-seconda ...
.


History

Murray's creation and first use of the nonlinear project funding model was in 1996 when he was approached by Cristo Rey High School in Chicago to help them find a way to fund their new school. The group had few assets and no plan of how they would create a quality program that would be affordable to inner city students. The program Murray designed is based upon the concepts of
job sharing Job sharing or work sharing is an employment arrangement where two people, or sometimes more, are retained on a part-time or reduced-time basis to perform a job normally fulfilled by one person working full-time. This leads to a net reduction in ...
and employee leasing; Cristo Rey students attend class four days per week, and then attend a corporate internship at a Chicago business on the fifth day. The revenues generated by these internships cover a great majority of tuition costs for Cristo Rey students, which helps keep their tuition rates low. After implementation of this plan the Chicago community school saw its dropout rate decline from 75% to 1%, with 100% of graduates being accepted to college. The Cristo Rey Network now successfully operates this program at 38 schools across 24 states. Murray's experience creating the nonlinear method when working with Cristo Rey led him to found Equity Schools in 2001. Since its creation, Equity Schools has worked with many schools in the US to plan and implement solutions to funding problems.


Nonlinear project funding

The nonlinear approach used by Equity Schools is a method at working through funding problems when conventional sources of funding are not enough to accomplish a project or maintain operations. Conventional, or “linear”, sources of funding often rely upon fundraising and government programs (loans, grants, tax referendums). By contrast, a nonlinear approach may use conventional funding sources where applicable, but then examines relationships and existing revenue streams to identify sufficient funding from several, often non-obvious or unexpected sources. Utilizing multiple diverse sources for funding makes a nonlinear approach highly conducive to a customized, self-sustaining funding strategy to support projects and operations. This approach is comprehensive as it includes factors such as a school's curriculum, character and culture, finances, real estate, and long-term educational, operational, and capital needs. In a 2021 interview, Murray described the nonlinear way of thinking and process, including "The 17 Rules of Nonlinear Funding".{{cite journal , editor1-last=Ambrose , editor1-first=Don , title=Ethical Leader Promoting Human Rights: An Interview With Nonlinear Funding Innovator Richard Murray , journal=Roeper Review , date=July 2021 , volume=43 , issue=3 , page=212-216 , doi=10.1080/02783193.2021.1923108 , s2cid=236477309 , doi-access=free


References


External links


Official website
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