Heartland Daily News

Innovative Schools Nationwide Receive $13 Million in Yass Prizes

Smiling college students at graduation

Innovative schools nationwide receive $13 million in Yass Prizes and awards as outstanding models of education.

by Cole Lauterbach

(The Center Square) – Thirty-three different educational institutions received a share of $13 million from a Pennsylvania-based family in recognition of their innovative methods.

Referred to as the “Pulitzer of Education Innovation,” the $1 million Yass Prize went to Valiant Cross Academy, an all-boys Christian school based in Montgomery, Alabama.

“This is so amazing, I’m so excited,” Anthony Brock, co-founder and executive director of the academy, said at the Dec. 13 awards ceremony. “I want to give this opportunity to every boy of color in America. I’m going to go back and work even harder. Thank you Janine and Jeff Yass, Jeanne Allen, and the Yass Prize team!”

Located across from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s church, the private academy has educated young Black men since its initial sixth-grade class in 2015, which graduated in 2022. The school boasts “distinct uniforms, an effective consequence and reward system, and an intense focus on the academic success of our scholars.”

According to their website, Valiant Cross has “double the math and triple the literacy time, differentiated instruction, aggressive tutoring, a daily after-school program and chapel service.”

The award – in its third year – is sponsored by Janine and Jeff Yass, Pennsylvania-based philanthropists also of the Yass Foundation for Education.

“Valiant Cross Academy represents the gold standard of education innovation in America,” said Janine Yass. “Our goal is to accelerate all our prize winners’ efforts to scale up and drive impact in the lives of the students they serve. America’s children desperately need innovative solutions to overcome the learning loss and falling test scores observed over the past several years.”

The 2022 grand prize went to the Arizona Autism Charter Schools.

In addition to the top award, nine semifinalists went home on Dec. 13 with $500,000.

They are, according to the news release:

Twenty-three other institutions were each awarded $200,000 through the Sustainable, Transformational, Outstanding and Permissionless – or STOP – education award.

Originally published by The Center Square. Republished with permission.

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