LeBron Has Never Been More Popular With Senior Citizen Cacs

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Funny how y'all don't get this

http://www.cleveland.com/cavs/index.ssf/2014/10/lebron_james_changing_lives.html

AKRON, Ohio – LeBron James is helping about 800 children from his hometown graduate from high school one day -- kids who otherwise might have ended up on the streets.

That's what he means when he says he wants to make an impact that lasts after his basketball career is over.

"That's part of my whole plan," the Cavaliers' superstar said Tuesday in an exclusive interview with the Northeast Ohio Media Group. (Read the interview transcript here.) "I wanted to do something that (Akron youths) would be empowered by, that was going to be sustainable, something that would last for generations."

All week, the Northeast Ohio Media Group has chronicled James' empire -- hisbasketball stardom that will grow even more Thursday night in his return debut with the Cavaliers, his business interests, acting, and now his LeBron James Family Foundation.

Each facet of his professional life is built so that James will hold power and influence when his basketball career ends, with perhaps none more influential than his charitable foundation.

It's through his foundation that James developed a mentoring program, called Wheels For Education, to help kids beginning in the third grade -- identified as "at risk" of dropping out -- through their graduation from high school.

It's at that level -- third grade -- when children who suffer primarily from poor reading and math skills (but also societal problems such as poverty and absent parents) become at risk of failing to graduate without intervention, education professionals say.

James' program is in its fourth year and has grown to 800 students. He won't know until 2021 -- the year the first class graduates -- if the program is truly doing what it's intended to do, but early results are promising.

James told the NEOMG he would even consider taking his program statewide. The foundation spent about $305,000 on the program in 2012 -- the last year in which financial data is available.

"If this thing is sustainable, which we believe it is ... if the opportunity presents itself to do it in other places besides Akron, we would love to," James said.

Wheels For Education evolved from the bike-a-thon the foundation used to sponsor each year in which Akron kids would receive bicycles and ride the city's streets with James. Now, children in James' program also participate in the Akron After School intervention program, which serves the same purpose of trying to prevent children struggling in reading and math from eventually dropping out.

It's a partnership. Through the foundation, James motivates children to be diligent in their attendance to Akron After School, with support from James' corporate partners such as Nike and Samsung.

Children feel connected to James in the program – he constantly speaks to them via social media, giving them a sense of pride by association. Akron administrators say the children do not want to disappoint him.

AKRON, Ohio – LeBron James is helping about 800 children from his hometown graduate from high school one day -- kids who otherwise might have ended up on the streets.

That's what he means when he says he wants to make an impact that lasts after his basketball career is over.

"That's part of my whole plan," the Cavaliers' superstar said Tuesday in an exclusive interview with the Northeast Ohio Media Group. (Read the interview transcript here.) "I wanted to do something that (Akron youths) would be empowered by, that was going to be sustainable, something that would last for generations."

All week, the Northeast Ohio Media Group has chronicled James' empire -- hisbasketball stardom that will grow even more Thursday night in his return debut with the Cavaliers, his business interests, acting, and now his LeBron James Family Foundation.

Each facet of his professional life is built so that James will hold power and influence when his basketball career ends, with perhaps none more influential than his charitable foundation.

It's through his foundation that James developed a mentoring program, called Wheels For Education, to help kids beginning in the third grade -- identified as "at risk" of dropping out -- through their graduation from high school.

It's at that level -- third grade -- when children who suffer primarily from poor reading and math skills (but also societal problems such as poverty and absent parents) become at risk of failing to graduate without intervention, education professionals say.

James' program is in its fourth year and has grown to 800 students. He won't know until 2021 -- the year the first class graduates -- if the program is truly doing what it's intended to do, but early results are promising.

James told the NEOMG he would even consider taking his program statewide. The foundation spent about $305,000 on the program in 2012 -- the last year in which financial data is available.

"If this thing is sustainable, which we believe it is ... if the opportunity presents itself to do it in other places besides Akron, we would love to," James said.

Wheels For Education evolved from the bike-a-thon the foundation used to sponsor each year in which Akron kids would receive bicycles and ride the city's streets with James. Now, children in James' program also participate in the Akron After School intervention program, which serves the same purpose of trying to prevent children struggling in reading and math from eventually dropping out.

It's a partnership. Through the foundation, James motivates children to be diligent in their attendance to Akron After School, with support from James' corporate partners such as Nike and Samsung.

Children feel connected to James in the program – he constantly speaks to them via social media, giving them a sense of pride by association. Akron administrators say the children do not want to disappoint him.


In the summer, the James foundation started a technology camp, which uses tablets provided by Samsung, to augment the Akron After School summer program.

The foundation motivates parents, too. They can receive a month's rent, free groceries, or a Samsung TV by involving themselves (by involving their children) in the Wheels and Akron After School programs.

It's early, but it's working. Last school year, the reading scores of third graders in James' program grew 6.7 percent more than the children who didn't participate. For fourth graders, or students who had been in James' program for one year already, the growth was 36.9 percent higher.

Fifth graders, with two years in James' program, experienced 30.3 percent higher growth.

"We're showing more growth, now we're looking for significant growth" as the children get older, said Desiree Bolden, manager of Akron schools' intervention efforts who works directly with James' foundation. "We're trending in the right direction. We're intervening in kids' lives and they're showing more growth."

At the same time in Ohio, two initiatives out of the governor's office to improve graduation rates are ongoing. By coincidence, they share some traits with James' program.

In one of two initiatives -- both out of Gov. John Kasich's office -- schools have access to millions of dollars in state funding to create mentorship programs with businesses and non-profits in their communities.

Also, third-grade students are required to pass a state reading test before promotion to the fourth grade.

James model, if he were willing, could potentially work in other districts struggling to meet the state's guidelines. There's been no contact between James and the Kasich administration, and James' focus is clearly on Akron now. But he said "there are kids in other places who need the same coverage, the same activity, to understand how important education is, understand how important role models are just to cover them and look after them."

Akron's performance on third-grade reading tests was the best among Ohio's largest urban school districts. According to the Akron Beacon Journal, passing rates on the state's reading test jumped from about 80 percent in the spring to 99 percent over the summer.

Bolden said there is no one group or program responsible for the improvement, but she said James' foundation is making an impact, beyond merely reading improvement.

Bolden is impressed with the depth of education policy the James foundation has, which comes from multiple advisory boards of education professionals assembled to assist the foundation.

When the James foundation and Akron After School noticed a need for mentorship after the children leave elementary school (the Akron After School program runs through fifth grade), the foundation added two boards of advisers, one for middle school and one for high school.

"In the early days of our partnership, I was checking for authenticity," Bolden said. "What's this going to look like, you know? This is so way beyond where I ever thought we would be. The attention to detail, the attention to being open and flexible to change to meet the needs of the children.

"And then, because of LeBron's influence, the chance to think outside the box for us and bring things we would never ever be close to getting."

Overseeing the James foundation is Michele Campbell, a Tallmadge native who also serves as chief operating officer for James' LRMR marketing firm.

Campbell said James is constantly involved, but she serves as James' eyes and ears, and as his proxy in the schools and at foundation events James doesn't attend. That includes when James was away from Northeast Ohio for four years playing for the Miami Heat.

According to the foundation's most recent financial disclosure form, federally required of all non-profit organizations, the James foundation raised at least $331,000 each year since 2008, except for one year. In 2011 – James' first year away from the Cavaliers – the foundation raised about $90,000.

It was following that first year with the Heat, when James was vilified in Cleveland and in most NBA cities, that the foundation turned its focus away from a bike-a-thon and toward improving graduation rates.

The foundation, with its new primary goal, raised $752,000 in 2012, with about half from James himself. That year, the foundation spent $255,000 on its Wheels For Education program, $50,000 on the technology camp that summer, and $100,000 for a year-around basketball program for middle and high-school students.

"When he went to Miami, that first year he was there, it's pretty well documented that it was a rough year for him," Campbell said. "He was basically hated wherever he went. That year was the best thing that ever happened to the foundation, because it allowed him to grow as a philanthropist, sit back and learn what legacy he wanted to leave, what kind of difference he wanted to make."

The foundation is engaged in other projects, including home restorationsin Akron; providing new athletic uniforms at James' alma mater Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary High School; and working with the Boys & Girls Club in each city that hosts the NBA All-Star Game that particular year.

Laron Sledge-Bay, the part-time city of Akron employee who works at the park where James and Sprite refurbished the basketball courts, said the people of Akron would see the potential in James' foundation and look for it to do more.

"Maybe, eventually, he can go into housing," Sledge-Bay said.

James, though, remains focused on his mentoring program.

"The evolution for us is to continue to stay on the kids," James said. "Because it's more than just going to school. It's understanding what these kids go through on a day-to-day basis, when they're back home or while they're at school.

"We want to continue to grow, but before growth we want something that's sustainable."





:wow:
 

superunknown23

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Lebron returning to Cleveland is just a good story.
I initially thought it was a dumb move career-wise, but it looks good :wow:
 

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CLEVELAND, Ohio -- LeBron James won't know if his charitable foundation's work to help at-risk youths get an education is ultimately successful until 2021.

That's when the first class of children participating in the LeBron James Family Foundation's Wheels For Education program will graduate from Akron Public Schools.

But preliminary data showing improvements in reading test scores for the children in James' program is remarkable. Presented with the data, James agreed to an exclusive interview with the Northeast Ohio Media Group to discuss his foundation's work.

Below is a transcript of the interview. Questions have been edited for brevity.

Question: Some of the students in your program saw improvements in their reading scorers 37 percent higher in some cases than children not in the program. What's your reaction to the data?

LeBron James: "The initial reaction is like, wow. But at the same time, for me, I don't do it to get results or satisfaction from numbers, I do it because I feel like it's my responsibility to continue to empower the youth in my neighborhood, the youth in my city, and give them something where they can better themselves long term. And that's very important for me."

Q: The first class in your program won't graduate until 2021. Is this project an example of your desire to make a long-term impact on society?

LJ: "That's part of my whole plan. From the beginning, when I started to do my foundation work, I wanted to do something that would be sustainable, and not just do 'one-offs.' You do something one summer and then it's over and done with. I wanted to do something that they would be empowered by, that was going to be sustainable, something that would last for generations. And to this point we've done such a great job.

"Michele Campbell, she's unbelievable. Desiree (Bolden), who's part of Akron Public Schools, Akron University, for them lending their hand to us, man, and everyone that has something to do with it. With tackling these kids, getting these kids to understand how important education is, and for me I just try to continue to empower them and be the role model I can to them and just use the power that I have."

Q: Your program is rich in education policy, produced through advisory boards of education professionals working with the foundation. Why did you decide to seek outside counsel?

LJ: "For us to have the board that we have and the reason I wanted to do it that way is so many people have great input and I wanted, even though my name carries a lot of weight, I wanted to get people who really knew and really knew how to dig down and deep, and had not only the personality but the education side of the whole system. What's the graduation rate for these kids? What grade should you start at? Is it second grade, is it third grade, is it fourth grade? Where kids start? Or if they finish school that year do they get to college? We've got the smartest people, the people that we could trust to run it, and it's been unbelievable and hopefully we could continue it."

Q: If your program continues to show success, would you consider expanding it to other parts of Ohio?

LJ: "If this thing is sustainable, which we believe it is, we believe this is a long-term thing for us. We always talk about it at the end of our year, the class of 2022, the class of 2023, if it's sustainable, if the opportunity presents itself to do it in other places besides Akron, we would love to. Obviously this is our staple, but if there is an opportunity, we would love to.

"Because the kids here, there are kids in other places who need the same coverage, the same activity, to understand how important education is, understand how important role models are just to cover them and look after them. It's very important."

Q: There are state education initiatives similar in some ways to what you're doing. One is the third-grade reading guarantee, which requires students to pass a reading test before promotion to the fourth grade. Your program seems to have different incentives.

LJ: "It's more of giving these kids a responsibility. We read our 'I Promise' initiative every year, and when kids feel like 'I can be responsible' and 'I can be rewarded at the end of something,' if they have something to shoot for, it makes it even more gratifying for those kids. Listening to your teachers and being on time and helping your classmate in need of help, and being socially active, and being in great shape. And at the end of the year you'll have a big graduation and you'll receive things, and when kids can have something to strive for, adults aren't the only ones who thrive off of having goals. Kids do as well, almost more than us because they love gifts and they feel like they've accomplished something, so it means a lot."

Q: You created a technology camp to coincide with Akron Public Schools' summer intervention program. In addition, your corporate partner Samsung donated tablets for the camp. Why did you create the camp and get Samsung involved?

LJ: "It's totally different than the way we grew up being educated. It was all school books. It was all school books and knowledge from the teacher. In today's society, being able to surf the web and being educated on how to surf the web is very, very important. So with my partnership from the beginning with Samsung, I thought it would be a huge thing if they could not only collab (sic) with me doing things for them, kind of a partnership, but also bring in my foundation."

Q: Will your foundation ever expand its focus beyond student mentoring and improving the likelihood of graduation?

LJ: "The evolution for us is to continue to stay on the kids. Tackle the issues. Because it's more than just going to school. It's understanding what these kids go through on a day-to-day basis, when they're back home or while they're at school. Understanding these kids, and more importantly, what their needs are. We want to continue to grow, but before growth we want something that's sustainable. We want to sustain something year after year after year, then I believe growth will come with that."
 

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Funny how y'all don't get this

http://www.cleveland.com/cavs/index.ssf/2014/10/lebron_james_changing_lives.html

AKRON, Ohio – LeBron James is helping about 800 children from his hometown graduate from high school one day -- kids who otherwise might have ended up on the streets.

That's what he means when he says he wants to make an impact that lasts after his basketball career is over.

"That's part of my whole plan," the Cavaliers' superstar said Tuesday in an exclusive interview with the Northeast Ohio Media Group. (Read the interview transcript here.) "I wanted to do something that (Akron youths) would be empowered by, that was going to be sustainable, something that would last for generations."

All week, the Northeast Ohio Media Group has chronicled James' empire -- hisbasketball stardom that will grow even more Thursday night in his return debut with the Cavaliers, his business interests, acting, and now his LeBron James Family Foundation.

Each facet of his professional life is built so that James will hold power and influence when his basketball career ends, with perhaps none more influential than his charitable foundation.

It's through his foundation that James developed a mentoring program, called Wheels For Education, to help kids beginning in the third grade -- identified as "at risk" of dropping out -- through their graduation from high school.

It's at that level -- third grade -- when children who suffer primarily from poor reading and math skills (but also societal problems such as poverty and absent parents) become at risk of failing to graduate without intervention, education professionals say.

James' program is in its fourth year and has grown to 800 students. He won't know until 2021 -- the year the first class graduates -- if the program is truly doing what it's intended to do, but early results are promising.

James told the NEOMG he would even consider taking his program statewide. The foundation spent about $305,000 on the program in 2012 -- the last year in which financial data is available.

"If this thing is sustainable, which we believe it is ... if the opportunity presents itself to do it in other places besides Akron, we would love to," James said.

Wheels For Education evolved from the bike-a-thon the foundation used to sponsor each year in which Akron kids would receive bicycles and ride the city's streets with James. Now, children in James' program also participate in the Akron After School intervention program, which serves the same purpose of trying to prevent children struggling in reading and math from eventually dropping out.

It's a partnership. Through the foundation, James motivates children to be diligent in their attendance to Akron After School, with support from James' corporate partners such as Nike and Samsung.

Children feel connected to James in the program – he constantly speaks to them via social media, giving them a sense of pride by association. Akron administrators say the children do not want to disappoint him.

AKRON, Ohio – LeBron James is helping about 800 children from his hometown graduate from high school one day -- kids who otherwise might have ended up on the streets.

That's what he means when he says he wants to make an impact that lasts after his basketball career is over.

"That's part of my whole plan," the Cavaliers' superstar said Tuesday in an exclusive interview with the Northeast Ohio Media Group. (Read the interview transcript here.) "I wanted to do something that (Akron youths) would be empowered by, that was going to be sustainable, something that would last for generations."

All week, the Northeast Ohio Media Group has chronicled James' empire -- hisbasketball stardom that will grow even more Thursday night in his return debut with the Cavaliers, his business interests, acting, and now his LeBron James Family Foundation.

Each facet of his professional life is built so that James will hold power and influence when his basketball career ends, with perhaps none more influential than his charitable foundation.

It's through his foundation that James developed a mentoring program, called Wheels For Education, to help kids beginning in the third grade -- identified as "at risk" of dropping out -- through their graduation from high school.

It's at that level -- third grade -- when children who suffer primarily from poor reading and math skills (but also societal problems such as poverty and absent parents) become at risk of failing to graduate without intervention, education professionals say.

James' program is in its fourth year and has grown to 800 students. He won't know until 2021 -- the year the first class graduates -- if the program is truly doing what it's intended to do, but early results are promising.

James told the NEOMG he would even consider taking his program statewide. The foundation spent about $305,000 on the program in 2012 -- the last year in which financial data is available.

"If this thing is sustainable, which we believe it is ... if the opportunity presents itself to do it in other places besides Akron, we would love to," James said.

Wheels For Education evolved from the bike-a-thon the foundation used to sponsor each year in which Akron kids would receive bicycles and ride the city's streets with James. Now, children in James' program also participate in the Akron After School intervention program, which serves the same purpose of trying to prevent children struggling in reading and math from eventually dropping out.

It's a partnership. Through the foundation, James motivates children to be diligent in their attendance to Akron After School, with support from James' corporate partners such as Nike and Samsung.

Children feel connected to James in the program – he constantly speaks to them via social media, giving them a sense of pride by association. Akron administrators say the children do not want to disappoint him.


In the summer, the James foundation started a technology camp, which uses tablets provided by Samsung, to augment the Akron After School summer program.

The foundation motivates parents, too. They can receive a month's rent, free groceries, or a Samsung TV by involving themselves (by involving their children) in the Wheels and Akron After School programs.

It's early, but it's working. Last school year, the reading scores of third graders in James' program grew 6.7 percent more than the children who didn't participate. For fourth graders, or students who had been in James' program for one year already, the growth was 36.9 percent higher.

Fifth graders, with two years in James' program, experienced 30.3 percent higher growth.

"We're showing more growth, now we're looking for significant growth" as the children get older, said Desiree Bolden, manager of Akron schools' intervention efforts who works directly with James' foundation. "We're trending in the right direction. We're intervening in kids' lives and they're showing more growth."

At the same time in Ohio, two initiatives out of the governor's office to improve graduation rates are ongoing. By coincidence, they share some traits with James' program.

In one of two initiatives -- both out of Gov. John Kasich's office -- schools have access to millions of dollars in state funding to create mentorship programs with businesses and non-profits in their communities.

Also, third-grade students are required to pass a state reading test before promotion to the fourth grade.

James model, if he were willing, could potentially work in other districts struggling to meet the state's guidelines. There's been no contact between James and the Kasich administration, and James' focus is clearly on Akron now. But he said "there are kids in other places who need the same coverage, the same activity, to understand how important education is, understand how important role models are just to cover them and look after them."

Akron's performance on third-grade reading tests was the best among Ohio's largest urban school districts. According to the Akron Beacon Journal, passing rates on the state's reading test jumped from about 80 percent in the spring to 99 percent over the summer.

Bolden said there is no one group or program responsible for the improvement, but she said James' foundation is making an impact, beyond merely reading improvement.

Bolden is impressed with the depth of education policy the James foundation has, which comes from multiple advisory boards of education professionals assembled to assist the foundation.

When the James foundation and Akron After School noticed a need for mentorship after the children leave elementary school (the Akron After School program runs through fifth grade), the foundation added two boards of advisers, one for middle school and one for high school.

"In the early days of our partnership, I was checking for authenticity," Bolden said. "What's this going to look like, you know? This is so way beyond where I ever thought we would be. The attention to detail, the attention to being open and flexible to change to meet the needs of the children.

"And then, because of LeBron's influence, the chance to think outside the box for us and bring things we would never ever be close to getting."

Overseeing the James foundation is Michele Campbell, a Tallmadge native who also serves as chief operating officer for James' LRMR marketing firm.

Campbell said James is constantly involved, but she serves as James' eyes and ears, and as his proxy in the schools and at foundation events James doesn't attend. That includes when James was away from Northeast Ohio for four years playing for the Miami Heat.

According to the foundation's most recent financial disclosure form, federally required of all non-profit organizations, the James foundation raised at least $331,000 each year since 2008, except for one year. In 2011 – James' first year away from the Cavaliers – the foundation raised about $90,000.

It was following that first year with the Heat, when James was vilified in Cleveland and in most NBA cities, that the foundation turned its focus away from a bike-a-thon and toward improving graduation rates.

The foundation, with its new primary goal, raised $752,000 in 2012, with about half from James himself. That year, the foundation spent $255,000 on its Wheels For Education program, $50,000 on the technology camp that summer, and $100,000 for a year-around basketball program for middle and high-school students.

"When he went to Miami, that first year he was there, it's pretty well documented that it was a rough year for him," Campbell said. "He was basically hated wherever he went. That year was the best thing that ever happened to the foundation, because it allowed him to grow as a philanthropist, sit back and learn what legacy he wanted to leave, what kind of difference he wanted to make."

The foundation is engaged in other projects, including home restorationsin Akron; providing new athletic uniforms at James' alma mater Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary High School; and working with the Boys & Girls Club in each city that hosts the NBA All-Star Game that particular year.

Laron Sledge-Bay, the part-time city of Akron employee who works at the park where James and Sprite refurbished the basketball courts, said the people of Akron would see the potential in James' foundation and look for it to do more.

"Maybe, eventually, he can go into housing," Sledge-Bay said.

James, though, remains focused on his mentoring program.

"The evolution for us is to continue to stay on the kids," James said. "Because it's more than just going to school. It's understanding what these kids go through on a day-to-day basis, when they're back home or while they're at school.

"We want to continue to grow, but before growth we want something that's sustainable."

This has nothing to do with him playing with the Cavs or spending his winters in Cleveleland..He could do every bit of this if he was playing in New York, LA or Hong Kong...

In fact the article even states he began the process of this charity while he was in South Beach 4 years ago..He's just getting props for it NOW from the Cleveland media, because he's no longer viewed as "the bad guy"..It fits into the coming home narrative more cleanly now ,but he's BEEN making a difference in these kids lives..Without the help of Dan Gilbert and the approval of these good ole boy 'muricans...Who could give two damns about him helping poor kids in the hood....

Jalen Rose never played a day for the Detroit Pistons and is running one of the most successful charter schools in the city while living in L.A.

It's not like if the Cavs didn't get the #1 pick last summer and their starting PG was Kirk Hinrich and not Kyrie Irving, LeBron woulda been like "fukk the kids"....

One thing has nothing to do with the other..It's just being packaged like its does...
 

NYC Rebel

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This has nothing to do with him playing with the Cavs or spending his winters in Cleveleland..He could do every bit of this if he was playing in New York, LA or Hong Kong...

In fact the article even states he began the process of this charity while he was in South Beach 4 years ago..He's just getting props for it NOW from the Cleveland media, because he's no longer viewed as "the bad guy"..It fits into the coming home narrative more cleanly now ,but he's BEEN making a difference in these kids lives..Without the help of Dan Gilbert and the approval of these good ole boy 'muricans...Who could give two damns about him helping poor kids in the hood....

Jalen Rose never played a day for the Detroit Pistons and is running one of the most successful charter schools in the city while living in L.A.

It's not like if the Cavs didn't get the #1 pick last summer and their starting PG was Kirk Hinrich and not Kyrie Irving, LeBron woulda been like "fukk the kids"....

One thing has nothing to do with the other..It's just being packaged like its does...
He said being on the ground was a factor. Whose to say how other than him?
 

Kaypain

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Funny how y'all don't get this

http://www.cleveland.com/cavs/index.ssf/2014/10/lebron_james_changing_lives.html

AKRON, Ohio – LeBron James is helping about 800 children from his hometown graduate from high school one day -- kids who otherwise might have ended up on the streets.

That's what he means when he says he wants to make an impact that lasts after his basketball career is over.

"That's part of my whole plan," the Cavaliers' superstar said Tuesday in an exclusive interview with the Northeast Ohio Media Group. (Read the interview transcript here.) "I wanted to do something that (Akron youths) would be empowered by, that was going to be sustainable, something that would last for generations."

All week, the Northeast Ohio Media Group has chronicled James' empire -- hisbasketball stardom that will grow even more Thursday night in his return debut with the Cavaliers, his business interests, acting, and now his LeBron James Family Foundation.

Each facet of his professional life is built so that James will hold power and influence when his basketball career ends, with perhaps none more influential than his charitable foundation.

It's through his foundation that James developed a mentoring program, called Wheels For Education, to help kids beginning in the third grade -- identified as "at risk" of dropping out -- through their graduation from high school.

It's at that level -- third grade -- when children who suffer primarily from poor reading and math skills (but also societal problems such as poverty and absent parents) become at risk of failing to graduate without intervention, education professionals say.

James' program is in its fourth year and has grown to 800 students. He won't know until 2021 -- the year the first class graduates -- if the program is truly doing what it's intended to do, but early results are promising.

James told the NEOMG he would even consider taking his program statewide. The foundation spent about $305,000 on the program in 2012 -- the last year in which financial data is available.

"If this thing is sustainable, which we believe it is ... if the opportunity presents itself to do it in other places besides Akron, we would love to," James said.

Wheels For Education evolved from the bike-a-thon the foundation used to sponsor each year in which Akron kids would receive bicycles and ride the city's streets with James. Now, children in James' program also participate in the Akron After School intervention program, which serves the same purpose of trying to prevent children struggling in reading and math from eventually dropping out.

It's a partnership. Through the foundation, James motivates children to be diligent in their attendance to Akron After School, with support from James' corporate partners such as Nike and Samsung.

Children feel connected to James in the program – he constantly speaks to them via social media, giving them a sense of pride by association. Akron administrators say the children do not want to disappoint him.

AKRON, Ohio – LeBron James is helping about 800 children from his hometown graduate from high school one day -- kids who otherwise might have ended up on the streets.

That's what he means when he says he wants to make an impact that lasts after his basketball career is over.

"That's part of my whole plan," the Cavaliers' superstar said Tuesday in an exclusive interview with the Northeast Ohio Media Group. (Read the interview transcript here.) "I wanted to do something that (Akron youths) would be empowered by, that was going to be sustainable, something that would last for generations."

All week, the Northeast Ohio Media Group has chronicled James' empire -- hisbasketball stardom that will grow even more Thursday night in his return debut with the Cavaliers, his business interests, acting, and now his LeBron James Family Foundation.

Each facet of his professional life is built so that James will hold power and influence when his basketball career ends, with perhaps none more influential than his charitable foundation.

It's through his foundation that James developed a mentoring program, called Wheels For Education, to help kids beginning in the third grade -- identified as "at risk" of dropping out -- through their graduation from high school.

It's at that level -- third grade -- when children who suffer primarily from poor reading and math skills (but also societal problems such as poverty and absent parents) become at risk of failing to graduate without intervention, education professionals say.

James' program is in its fourth year and has grown to 800 students. He won't know until 2021 -- the year the first class graduates -- if the program is truly doing what it's intended to do, but early results are promising.

James told the NEOMG he would even consider taking his program statewide. The foundation spent about $305,000 on the program in 2012 -- the last year in which financial data is available.

"If this thing is sustainable, which we believe it is ... if the opportunity presents itself to do it in other places besides Akron, we would love to," James said.

Wheels For Education evolved from the bike-a-thon the foundation used to sponsor each year in which Akron kids would receive bicycles and ride the city's streets with James. Now, children in James' program also participate in the Akron After School intervention program, which serves the same purpose of trying to prevent children struggling in reading and math from eventually dropping out.

It's a partnership. Through the foundation, James motivates children to be diligent in their attendance to Akron After School, with support from James' corporate partners such as Nike and Samsung.

Children feel connected to James in the program – he constantly speaks to them via social media, giving them a sense of pride by association. Akron administrators say the children do not want to disappoint him.


In the summer, the James foundation started a technology camp, which uses tablets provided by Samsung, to augment the Akron After School summer program.

The foundation motivates parents, too. They can receive a month's rent, free groceries, or a Samsung TV by involving themselves (by involving their children) in the Wheels and Akron After School programs.

It's early, but it's working. Last school year, the reading scores of third graders in James' program grew 6.7 percent more than the children who didn't participate. For fourth graders, or students who had been in James' program for one year already, the growth was 36.9 percent higher.

Fifth graders, with two years in James' program, experienced 30.3 percent higher growth.

"We're showing more growth, now we're looking for significant growth" as the children get older, said Desiree Bolden, manager of Akron schools' intervention efforts who works directly with James' foundation. "We're trending in the right direction. We're intervening in kids' lives and they're showing more growth."

At the same time in Ohio, two initiatives out of the governor's office to improve graduation rates are ongoing. By coincidence, they share some traits with James' program.

In one of two initiatives -- both out of Gov. John Kasich's office -- schools have access to millions of dollars in state funding to create mentorship programs with businesses and non-profits in their communities.

Also, third-grade students are required to pass a state reading test before promotion to the fourth grade.

James model, if he were willing, could potentially work in other districts struggling to meet the state's guidelines. There's been no contact between James and the Kasich administration, and James' focus is clearly on Akron now. But he said "there are kids in other places who need the same coverage, the same activity, to understand how important education is, understand how important role models are just to cover them and look after them."

Akron's performance on third-grade reading tests was the best among Ohio's largest urban school districts. According to the Akron Beacon Journal, passing rates on the state's reading test jumped from about 80 percent in the spring to 99 percent over the summer.

Bolden said there is no one group or program responsible for the improvement, but she said James' foundation is making an impact, beyond merely reading improvement.

Bolden is impressed with the depth of education policy the James foundation has, which comes from multiple advisory boards of education professionals assembled to assist the foundation.

When the James foundation and Akron After School noticed a need for mentorship after the children leave elementary school (the Akron After School program runs through fifth grade), the foundation added two boards of advisers, one for middle school and one for high school.

"In the early days of our partnership, I was checking for authenticity," Bolden said. "What's this going to look like, you know? This is so way beyond where I ever thought we would be. The attention to detail, the attention to being open and flexible to change to meet the needs of the children.

"And then, because of LeBron's influence, the chance to think outside the box for us and bring things we would never ever be close to getting."

Overseeing the James foundation is Michele Campbell, a Tallmadge native who also serves as chief operating officer for James' LRMR marketing firm.

Campbell said James is constantly involved, but she serves as James' eyes and ears, and as his proxy in the schools and at foundation events James doesn't attend. That includes when James was away from Northeast Ohio for four years playing for the Miami Heat.

According to the foundation's most recent financial disclosure form, federally required of all non-profit organizations, the James foundation raised at least $331,000 each year since 2008, except for one year. In 2011 – James' first year away from the Cavaliers – the foundation raised about $90,000.

It was following that first year with the Heat, when James was vilified in Cleveland and in most NBA cities, that the foundation turned its focus away from a bike-a-thon and toward improving graduation rates.

The foundation, with its new primary goal, raised $752,000 in 2012, with about half from James himself. That year, the foundation spent $255,000 on its Wheels For Education program, $50,000 on the technology camp that summer, and $100,000 for a year-around basketball program for middle and high-school students.

"When he went to Miami, that first year he was there, it's pretty well documented that it was a rough year for him," Campbell said. "He was basically hated wherever he went. That year was the best thing that ever happened to the foundation, because it allowed him to grow as a philanthropist, sit back and learn what legacy he wanted to leave, what kind of difference he wanted to make."

The foundation is engaged in other projects, including home restorationsin Akron; providing new athletic uniforms at James' alma mater Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary High School; and working with the Boys & Girls Club in each city that hosts the NBA All-Star Game that particular year.

Laron Sledge-Bay, the part-time city of Akron employee who works at the park where James and Sprite refurbished the basketball courts, said the people of Akron would see the potential in James' foundation and look for it to do more.

"Maybe, eventually, he can go into housing," Sledge-Bay said.

James, though, remains focused on his mentoring program.

"The evolution for us is to continue to stay on the kids," James said. "Because it's more than just going to school. It's understanding what these kids go through on a day-to-day basis, when they're back home or while they're at school.

"We want to continue to grow, but before growth we want something that's sustainable."

You-Complete-Me-the-joker-9546212-3.gif

These dudes don't care about shyt like that. They need negativity in their life. They need the Ray Rice, the Richard Sherman, and the Adrian Peterson shyt. It completes them.

Your either corny or a Thug. Choose your poison.
 

OG Talk

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He said being on the ground was a factor. Whose to say how other than him?
Be honest breh..

If the Cavs wouldn't have had the #1 pick, trade assets and a much younger more desirable roster than Miami how much of a factor would him "being on the ground" be?


This is LeBron, doing whats best for LeBron and having people around him savvy enough to spin into into a feel good story ..But the reality is the feel good story started 4 years ago when he started the foundation and everyone was calling him the most hated n1gga in sports and a scumbag...

I'm not mad he made the best business decision on and off the court..I'm just amazed at how gullible people are about it...I think it comes down to people believing what they want to believe about small town midwestern values...


When he says stuff like "In Ohio we know nothing is given" my lil cousins in Pork n Beans and Liberty City on Section 8 are looking at him like :childplease:

Since the summer started him and his team have been subconsciously promoting that Sarah Palin mess about "The Real America" and its no mistake that his demo numbers are improving with her base and not the majority of the youth and Black Americans..
 

NYC Rebel

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Be honest breh..

If the Cavs wouldn't have had the #1 pick, trade assets and a much younger more desirable roster than Miami how much of a factor would him "being on the ground" be?


This is LeBron, doing whats best for LeBron and having people around him savvy enough to spin into into a feel good story ..But the reality is the feel good story started 4 years ago when he started the foundation and everyone was calling him the most hated n1gga in sports and a scumbag...

I'm not mad he made the best business decision on and off the court..I'm just amazed at how gullible people are about it...I think it comes down to people believing what they want to believe about small town midwestern values...


When he says stuff like "In Ohio we know nothing is given" my lil cousins in Pork n Beans and Liberty City on Section 8 are looking at him like :childplease:

Since the summer started him and his team have been subconsciously promoting that Sarah Palin mess about "The Real America" and its no mistake that his demo numbers are improving with her base and not the majority of the youth and Black Americans..
I'm looking at actionable items while you're stuck on "feelings." That's number one

Two...the whole he doesn't have to be there narrative you're running with is a matter of opinion. I personally like working in the office rather than from home because it allows mental work face to face with people. It's a matter of preference. So to bring up Jalen means what?
 
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