BES (Build, Excel, Sustain) started its Fellowship program 20 years ago to support school leaders with the preparation and professional development they needed to design, found, and lead an excellent public charter school. Charter leaders began this work because they were committed to creating equal access and opportunity for all students.
When I stepped into the CEO role in 2018, I heard a common refrain from many leaders who had participated in our training: While BES was founded to help create equity and access for the students most in need of a quality education, there was a gap between our stated mission and our lived values. BES was part of a movement where "cookie cutter" school models based on “best practices” were placed into communities—instead of engaging authentically with communities to envision a school that reflects its values and meets its unique needs.
After seeking feedback from our leaders, we made a necessary pivot over the past three years. [pullquote]We’ve revamped our training and practices to truly embed our commitment to equity in the way we operate internally, train leaders, and work with communities to serve students and families.[/pullquote] Though this work is in no way complete, our approach today is much more community-centered, anti-racist, and supportive of leaders to leverage their lived experience and voices in the process of founding a school.
Despite a changing educational landscape and the very real trauma that a global pandemic has had on educators and the families they serve, BES Fellows persisted in their journeys to found the schools that communities demanded. Several members of our 2020 Fellowship are on track to open schools for the 2022-23 school year. BES’ 2021 cohort has begun their work of designing public schools for families in Colorado, Georgia, Missouri, New Jersey, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas. These Fellows have proposed 12 different school models, crafted and honed through ongoing community listening and engagement, resulting in a Montessori school and a high school focused on STEM and healthcare careers, among others. [pullquote]BES is excited to start Year 21 of preparing excellent leaders to fulfill their vision for a high-quality, locally responsive school that provides the equitable education students deserve, after losing so much to COVID.[/pullquote]
Schools that are truly responsive to their communities are creative in their approaches to everything from curriculum and instruction to pandemic problem-solving because the relationships they have with their families are authentic and built on two-way communication. BES is always looking for local partners and supporters to ensure our work is responsive to the unique needs of communities. If you're interested in having a BES Fellow in your region and/or launching a particular school model through the BES Fellowship, learn more and reach out to us at partners@bes.org.
At its core, the Fellowship is a multi-year program in which individuals deeply committed to transforming education design, found, and lead an excellent public charter school in a geographic area where families want and need different options for their children. After a highly competitive selection process, BES provides Fellows with a stipend and a minimum of four years of intensive support on their journey. Since 2001, the Fellowship has led to the creation of more than 195 independent public schools across 20 states and Washington DC. As of 2021, BES Fellow-founded schools educate more than 63,000 students.
Aasimah Navlakhi (she/her/hers) began her career as a speech and performance teacher in her hometown of Bangalore, India, and now serves as the Chief Executive Officer of BES (formerly Building Excellent Schools), a national nonprofit that identifies and prepares excellent leaders to transform education in their communities. Having experienced firsthand the life-changing power of great schools, Aasimah is committed to ensuring that all students have equal opportunities to learn, grow, and thrive.
The fight for educational equity has never been just about schools. The real North Star for this work is providing opportunities for each child to thrive into adulthood. This means that our advocacy...
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