Rhode Island
$500,000 Gift to Advance Education Research at the University of Rhode Island
KINGSTON, R.I. — Oct. 2, 2024 — Diane Chace Fannon ’74 and S. Kent Fannon ’74 have made a gift of $500,000 to the Feinstein College of Education at the University of Rhode Island to establish the Diane and Kent Fannon Education Research Endowment.
Faculty will be able to apply for funds from the endowment to support innovative research projects that will help teachers and improve learning outcomes. In addition to preparing teachers for the classroom, the College conducts advanced research on topics including literacy, STEM education, equity and inclusion, teaching with technology, and more.
“I began at URI with the intention of becoming a teacher for life,” said Diane Fannon. “After teaching first grade for two years in Connecticut, my career path took a different turn when we moved to New York. But my belief in the importance of teaching and education never wavered. When we had the opportunity to meet Dean Dennis, it became clear that a research endowment, with its potential to influence education well into the future, would have the longest echo.”
The Fannons attended an informational session from College of Education Dean Danielle Dennis as part of a series of events for 50th reunion attendees. Along with a formal presentation, they were able to talk directly for a deeper dive on strategic initiatives.
“It started with a return to campus for our 50th reunion,” said Kent Fannon. “We heard the dean talk with such passion about the College and were inspired by her vision for the future. We immediately knew we wanted to help.”
While significantly supporting discoveries to improve teaching and learning, the fund will also help to attract top-tier faculty to URI.
“The Diane and Kent Fannon Education Research Endowment will have a profound impact on our College’s research mission,” said Dennis. “Faculty in the college engage in scholarship that directly benefits Rhode Island schools and educational organizations, as well as these entities around the world. This will provide faculty with much needed resources to seed new research and continue their impactful work.”
With this recent gift, Diane and Kent Fannon continue a long tradition of giving to URI. They have made a transformational gift for the creation of The Fannon Student Success Center as part of the renovation of Ballentine Hall for the College of Business, created two endowed scholarships focused on marketing and entrepreneurship, and endowed the College of Business Career Day. They have been actively involved through the years on the College of Business Advisory Council and the University of Rhode Island Foundation & Alumni Engagement Board. Each has received the University of Rhode Island Presidential Distinguished Achievement Award.
The Fannons live in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. Diane retired as principal at The Richards Group, where she capped off an award-winning career in brand marketing, rising from copywriter to creative director, and then to executive vice president across a series of highly regarded firms. Kent retired as a partner at executive search firm Chartwell Partners, following a series of senior positions in publicly traded and private equity-owned healthcare companies. He began his career at American Airlines, Inc. Along with his degree from URI, he holds an MBA from the University of Chicago.
The Feinstein College of Education at the University of Rhode Island offers a range of bachelor’s, master’s, doctoral, and teacher certification programs. The College’s programs are certified through the Rhode Island Department of Education and the Association for Advancing Quality in Educator Preparation. It enrolls approximately 400 undergraduates and 200 graduate students per year, and its faculty have earned competitive national honors and worldwide recognition for their teaching and scholarship.
Rhode Island
RI Foundation plan would overhaul school funding, shift costs to state
McKee to launch ‘affordability’ agenda in reelection bid.
Facing a tough reelection fight, McKee will propose policies to help Rhode Islanders with the cost of living, starting with a tax cut for retirees.
A proposed overhaul of Rhode Island education funding unveiled by a panel of experts and the Rhode Island Foundation on Monday, Jan. 5 would simplify the way public education is paid for and shift spending from municipalities to the state.
A 33-page report from the Blue Ribbon Commission describes the state’s current funding formula as “complex,” “opaque,” and “unpredictable,” the product of years of emergency tweaks and political compromises.
“We are constantly confronted with the limitations of the current funding formula. We hear about it all the time, both as a funder and as a partner in the public education sector,” David Cicilline, Rhode Island Foundation president and former congressman, told reporters at a briefing on the plan, whose release was delayed as a result of a shooting at Brown University.
The commission recommends that the state share the cost of some things now borne entirely by local governments, such as transportation, building maintenance and vocational schooling. And it wants the state to take on some costs entirely − including retired teacher pensions, high-cost special education and out-of-district transportation − that are now shared with municipalities.
The current system places “an outsized fiscal burden on districts,” the report’s executive summary says.
But the price tag for taking that burden from cities and towns is large, and in a time of economic uncertainty might give Rhode Island State House leaders sticker shock.
At the same time that the commission shifts costs to the state, it is also proposing a roughly $300 million net increase in education spending to better reflect what its experts believe is necessary to guarantee.
The commission’s preferred scenario, in which the state covers 58% of school costs, would increase the state education budget by $590 million. Under this plan cities and towns would save $278 million.
Cicilline notes that state leaders could choose to phase the new spending in over two or three years to soften the budget impact.
Recent years have seen significant annual increases in education spending under the existing funding formula. The current state budget saw a $59 million increase in education spending from the previous year.
Cicilline also noted that the state’s unfunded pension obligation is projected to fall dramatically in 2036, at which point the cost of covering those payments for cities would fall.
The state currently pays 40% of teacher pension costs. Picking up the full cost of retiree pensions would push the state cost from a little over $100 million to more than $270 million, according to projections from the commission.
Who participated in the Blue Ribbon Commission?
The commission, hosted by the Rhode Island Foundation and Brown University’s Annenberg Institute, included representatives of nonprofits, municipal government, teachers unions, research academics and public schools, both traditional and charter.
The panel did not include any elected officials or state policymakers, such as members of the Rhode Island Department of Education or members of the General Assembly. However, Gov. Dan McKee, House Speaker K. Joseph Shekarchi and Senate President Valarie Lawson were briefed on the recommendations.
How did state officials react to the recommendations?
All reserved judgment on the plan, although many of the ideas in it align with priorities that Lawson, president of the National Education Association Rhode Island, expressed in an interview at the start of the month.
Shekarchi thanked the foundation and said the House will be “carefully reviewing” the recommendations. “A strong educational system is essential in making sure our students are well prepared for the rapidly-changing 21st century economy and is a critical component of our state’s future prosperity,” he said in an email.
The report “reflects a strong commitment to strengthening public education and expanding opportunity for every Rhode Island student – goals my administration has been working towards diligently,” McKee said in an email.
Senate spokesman Greg Pare said the Rhode Island Foundation is slated to give the chamber a presentation on the report Jan. 15.
“The Blue Ribbon Commission’s work raises important issues that we will be exploring, including state support relative to areas such as high-cost special needs and transportation,” Pare wrote.
Municipal winners and losers under new funding plan
Although most cities and towns come out big winners with the Blue Ribbon plan, some do better than others, and a few communities are projected to see a net loss.
In place of the current “quadratic mean” formula, which includes bonuses for communities with expensive real estate but a large number of low-income students, the commission proposes basing municipalities’ aid level entirely on real estate value. (The higher the assessed value of property in a city, the less aid it would receive.)
Newport would lose $7.8 million in state aid, the Chariho school district would lose $7.7 million, Westerly $1.3 million and Middletown $400,000, according to commission projections.
But all other communities would gain.
Providence would see see state aid increase by $186 million and its own projected costs fall from $118 million to $90 million.
East Providence would see state aid rise by $33 million and its own projected costs fall from $65 million to $44 million.
And Warwick would see state aid rise by $35 million while its own projected costs fall from $127 million to $92 million.
Rhode Island
Revolution Wind developers seek second court order against Trump administration
Rhode Island
Rhode Island GOP chairman Joe Powers to step down Jan. 15
What will RI look like in 2050? RI GOP leader fears rising spending
25 years into the new millennium, we asked, ‘What will the next 25 years bring’? House minority leader says it’s not too late to change trajectory
Rhode Island Republican Party chairman Joe Powers will resign effective Jan. 15, the party announced on Saturday, Jan. 3.
“Chairman Powers is stepping down due to the increased demands of his professional workload and an extensive travel schedule that no longer allow him to give the Chairmanship the full attention the position requires,” the party said in a news release. “The role of Chairman demands constant focus, and daily engagement especially moving into an election year, neither of which Chairman Powers can provide at this time.”
Powers a, real estate agent and unsuccessful 2022 candidate for a Cranston Senate seat, was elected to lead the state’s Republican Party in March 2023. He was reelected to a second two-year term in March.
During his tenure, Powers “oversaw meaningful organizational progress, including the successful update of the Party’s ByLaws and the full staffing of Party committees for the first time in over 20 years, establishing a strong and durable foundation heading into the next election cycle,” the GOP news release said.
Powers will remain on the GOP’s state Central Committee as chairman emeritus and will “continue to support Rhode Island Republicans in a smaller capacity,” the release said, thanking him “for his leadership and service.”
-
World1 week agoHamas builds new terror regime in Gaza, recruiting teens amid problematic election
-
Indianapolis, IN1 week agoIndianapolis Colts playoffs: Updated elimination scenario, AFC standings, playoff picture for Week 17
-
Business1 week agoGoogle is at last letting users swap out embarrassing Gmail addresses without losing their data
-
Southeast1 week agoTwo attorneys vanish during Florida fishing trip as ‘heartbroken’ wife pleads for help finding them
-
Politics1 week agoMost shocking examples of Chinese espionage uncovered by the US this year: ‘Just the tip of the iceberg’
-
News1 week agoRoads could remain slick, icy Saturday morning in Philadelphia area, tracking another storm on the way
-
World1 week agoPodcast: The 2025 EU-US relationship explained simply
-
News1 week agoMarijuana rescheduling would bring some immediate changes, but others will take time