BBVA Compass Opportunity Campus, the first of its kind for KIPP, makes its debut in Houston
- A KIPP original: The campus, home to KIPP NEXUS Primary School and KIPP NEXUS Middle School, is first KIPP campus nationwide to share its name with a corporate investor
- The funding: The BBVA Compass Foundation's $1.8 million contribution to KIPP Houston marks the bank's largest ever education investment
- Long wait list: New campus will open hundreds of seats in KIPP Houston, which currently has a waiting list of more than 10,000
- One perk: The bank announced at the ribbon-cutting it was giving each KIPP NEXUS student a $25 voucher to open a Young Savers account with BBVA Compass
HOUSTON, Dec. 4, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- BBVA Compass and KIPP Houston Public Schools cut the ribbon Monday on the charter school system's newest campus: the BBVA Compass Opportunity Campus, home of KIPP NEXUS Primary School and KIPP NEXUS Middle School in Northwest Houston. The campus, which welcomed its inaugural classes in the fall, is the first KIPP campus nationwide to share its name with a corporate investor.
KIPP is the nation's largest charter school system, and has a strong track record of moving low-income children to and through college at a much higher rate than traditional public schools. In the Houston area, 10.6 percent of low-income eighth-graders have graduated from college within six years, whereas 50 percent of KIPP Houston students do so. The new campus is opening hundreds of seats in KIPP Houston, which currently has a waiting list of more than 10,000, underscoring BBVA Compass' commitment to Houston and to creating opportunities in underserved communities.
"BBVA Compass' investment in KIPP Houston marks our largest ever education investment, and there's a reason we chose KIPP," said BBVA Compass President and CEO Onur Genç. "Whenever you see an organization that's having such a transformative effect on lives, especially children's lives, you want to do whatever you can to help it go farther and create even more opportunities."
Mike Feinberg, who co-founded KIPP in 1994 in Houston with fellow Teach For America teacher Dave Levin, said he hopes the partnership with BBVA Compass can serve as a model of public-private cooperation.
"KIPP is preparing our kids not just to do well in school, but to do well in life," he said. "This partnership is an example where business and K-12 can work directly together. BBVA Compass knows a lot about growing organizations and supporting businesses, and it can help give direction on how to shape the workforce of the future, how to give our kids both the hard academic skills and the soft skills — skills like teamwork, perseverance, self-control — that they're going to need to both get their foot in the door and also become future leaders."
The bank announced at the ribbon-cutting, which was delayed from earlier in the year due to Hurricane Harvey, that it was giving each KIPP NEXUS student a $25 voucher to open a Young Savers account with the bank. The bank's volunteers, meantime, have already spent time at the school teaching financial education to kindergarteners.
"One of the great things about the partnership with BBVA Compass has been the financial literacy class that's been offered to our youngest students, our kindergarteners," said KIPP NEXUS School Leader Lisa McClinton. "Many of our families are not aware of what it takes to really get to college and to sustain in college financially, and so this particular course was a way to start the conversation with our families here at KIPP NEXUS."
Hundreds get 'that awesome phone call'
KIPP launched a growth campaign in 2014, with a goal of adding 10 new schools in Houston to increase its total number of area students to 18,000 by 2024. The BBVA Compass Foundation became the lead corporate investor in the campaign, committing $1.8 million over five years and earning it the naming rights to one of KIPP's campuses for 10 years. The BBVA Compass Opportunity Campus is home to KIPP NEXUS Primary School and KIPP NEXUS Middle School. It currently boasts 91 kindergarteners and 110 fifth-graders, and plans to add first-grade and sixth-grade classes for the 2018-2019 school year.
KIPP Houston is a public charter school system, and it gets most of its operating dollars from the State of Texas. It was prohibited from using that funding for new facilities, however, until the Texas legislature voted to change that for the 2018-2019 school year. Now the state's charter schools will get $60 million for facilities funding, which charter-school advocates say covers only a fraction of the current facilities needs.
"The bottom line is this commitment from BBVA Compass is enabling us to open up a school in Northwest Houston, where we didn't have any schools and yet there were thousands of kids nearby on the waitlist," Feinberg said. "It allowed hundreds of families that were praying they could somehow get a seat in a KIPP school to get that awesome phone call saying, 'Guess what, good news, your child has a seat in our school.'"
A history of commitment
Over the past five years, BBVA Compass has invested more than $7 million in education, much of it in underserved areas. In 2015, for instance, the bank teamed up with the Houston Symphony and the Houston Independent School District to launch the Houston Symphony School Residency at Crespo Elementary, which has a student population that's 95 percent economically disadvantaged and 97 percent Hispanic.
As part of the program, two of the symphony's Community-Embedded Musicians lead classroom interactions designed to enrich the lives of every third-, fourth- and fifth-grade student at Crespo. BBVA Compass funded the program, the first of the kind in the city, which is structured around lessons, instrument demonstrations and performances.
The effort was designed in part to support the bank's drive to help build a pipeline of the kinds of creative thinkers Houston needs to sustain its lead in some of the most demanding disciplines that would seem to have nothing to do with the arts — medicine, space exploration, energy, to name a few. Studies have found that students from lower socioeconomic backgrounds were significantly more likely to excel in math if they'd had music education, for instance, and non-native English speakers are also able to pick up the language faster through the use of music.
"After Harvey, it's worth saying: We believe in Houston's bright future, we're committed to it, and we're paying close attention to what it needs to continue to be a model city in this 21st century," said BBVA Compass Director of Corporate Responsibility and Reputation Reymundo Ocañas, who played a prominent role in organizing the bank's relief efforts after the storm. "One of the best ways we can help ensure Houston's future is to give its children — all of its children — the education they need so they can one day step up and lead it into the 22nd century."
It's a sentiment KIPP's Feinberg echoes.
"Houston is such an entrepreneurial city with so many opportunities with so many industries, which means there's a need for a lot of talent here," Feinberg said. "But we're not going to get there if only 20 percent of all of our children wind up getting college degrees. It's simply not enough in this global economy, so we need to increase that level. And if we do, then the race to the top is won right here in Houston."
To learn more about BBVA Compass, visit: www.bbvacompass.com
For more news visit: www.bbva.com and newsroom.bbvacompass.com
About BBVA Group
BBVA (NYSE: BBVA) is a customer-centric global financial services group founded in 1857. The Group has a strong leadership position in the Spanish market, is the largest financial institution in Mexico, and has leading franchises in South America and the Sunbelt Region of the United States; it is also the leading shareholder in Garanti, Turkey's biggest bank for market capitalization. Its diversified business is focused on high-growth markets and it relies on technology as a key sustainable competitive advantage. Corporate responsibility is at the core of its business model. BBVA fosters financial education and inclusion, and supports scientific research and culture. It operates with the highest integrity, a long-term vision and applies the best practices. More information about BBVA Group can be found at bbva.com.
About BBVA Compass
BBVA Compass is a Sunbelt-based financial institution that operates 649 branches, including 336 in Texas, 89 in Alabama, 63 in Arizona, 61 in California, 45 in Florida, 37 in Colorado and 18 in New Mexico. BBVA Compass ranks among the top 25 largest U.S. commercial banks based on deposit market share and ranks among the largest banks in Alabama (2nd), Texas (4th) and Arizona (5th). BBVA Compass has been recognized as one of the leading small business lenders by the Small Business Administration (SBA) and ranked 5th nationally in the total number of SBA loans originated in fiscal year 2016. Additional information about BBVA Compass can be found at www.bbvacompass.com. For more BBVA Compass news, follow @BBVACompassNews on Twitter or visit newsroom.bbvacompass.com.
About KIPP Houston Public Schools
KIPP was founded in Houston in 1994 and has since grown to 209 public charter schools in 20 states and D.C. educating more than 88,000 children. Houston is KIPP's largest region and educates 14,500 students in 28 schools and serves an additional 2,300 alumni in college and beyond. While only 10.6 percent of students from low-income communities in Houston graduate from college, 50 percent of KIPPsters, tracked from the 8th grade, graduate college. www.kipphouston.org
SOURCE BBVA Compass
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