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Educational philanthropist and Chair of Ross Institute for
Advanced Study and Innovation in Education, New York City
and Founder of Ross School, East Hampton.
Ross Institute for Advanced Study and Innovation in Education
serves as an incubator for 21st century education. It facilitates
Ross School's entry into public school systems, acts as a
catalyst for research in areas such as Globalization in Education,
Mind, Brain and Education and Interdisciplinary Curriculum
for Cultural Understanding. Ross Institute's Inter-University
Consortium was founded in 2004. It is a network of universities
whose schools of education will utilize Ross School as a lab
school, and through teacher training the partners' findings
will be disseminated to public education, primarily in underserved
areas.
Founded in 1991 Ross School teaches the whole child for the
whole world. The school's multi-disciplinary curriculum presents
global cultural history as an outwardly-expanding spiral,
enabling multiple perspectives onto past and current history.
Ross School serves children from age 2 through the 12th grade.
In the 2006-2007 academic year the school enrollment will
number almost 550 students.
In 2006, the New York State Board of Regents approved the
charter for the Ross Global Academy which is a collaboration
with New York University's Steinhardt School of Education
and New York City's Board of Education. The charter school
is scheduled to open in New York City in fall 2006.
Courtney Sale Ross' philanthropy is focused on education,
emphasizing the underserved, globalization, and U.S./China
relations. Ross has given to major universities across the
United States including Harvard University, New York University,
the University of Southern California and Skidmore College.
At New York University's Tisch School of the Arts, Ross created
the Courtney Sale Ross Scholarship Fund for aid to minority
women. At NYU's Steinhardt School of Education, Ross' daughter,
Nicole, established the Courtney Sale Ross University Professor
of Education and Globalization Chair.
Ross' giving extends to the People's Republic of China where
she has endowed museums with contributions related to education
and research. At the Shanghai Museum, Ross created the Courtney
and Steven J. Ross Multi-Media and Communications Center,
an interactive theatre designed for use by international scholars.
Ross serves on boards with special emphases on education,
wellness and international relations, including New York University,
the Asia Society, the Brain and Creativity Institute at the
University of Southern California, the Committee on U.S./China
Relations, and the United Nations Association of the United
States of America.
Prior to her work in education, Courtney Sale Ross founded
a contemporary art gallery in Dallas, Texas. Thereafter, New
York State Governor Hugh Carey appointed Ross to curate a
state-wide exhibition celebrating two centuries of art in
New York. Ross followed this by producing an accompanying
documentary film 'The Big Picture' and then with a six-part
documentary series on the 'New York School' artists, 'Strokes
of Genius.' In 1990, Ross was executive producer on the feature
film, 'Listen Up! The Lives of Quincy Jones' which received
enthusiastic notices in the international press.
Courtney Sale Ross is a graduate of Skidmore College where
she was awarded an honorary doctoral degree in 1991. She is
the widow of Steven J. Ross, former Chairman and CEO of TimeWarner
and the mother of one daughter, Nicole Ross.
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