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2017 EDUCATION MAGAZINE

LINCOLN DAILY NEWS MARCH 1, 2017

Founded as a nonprofit in

1984 by Lincoln citizen Dr.

Sam Redding, the Academic

Development Institute’s mission

has been to “assist families,

schools, and communities with

children’s academic and personal

development.”

ADI began this work simply

with a summer program for

middle school students and

parent education programs for

schools. Since that time, ADI

has expanded its reach to include

every level of the education

system.

In 1983, Sam was a dean at

Lincoln College in Lincoln,

Illinois. Attracted by the name

Lincoln and the college’s

reputation for serving

underprepared students

(polishing the “diamond in the

rough”), and enabled by new

financial aid programs, minority

students enrolled in ever larger

numbers through the 1970s and

early ‘80s. By 1983, more than

a third of the college’s students

were African American, mostly

from Chicago. These students

were typically the first in their

families to go to college, and

the college built strong student

support programs to enhance

their opportunity for success.

Still, many did not succeed.

Concerned about students who

arrived at college full of hope but

not prepared for the challenges,

Dr. Redding formed ADI as a

non-profit.

In that same year, the Joyce

Foundation provided ADI with

a $27,000 grant to develop a

family engagement program

in three Chicago elementary

schools. The emphasis on family

engagement stemmed from Dr.

Redding’s observation that many

underprivileged students arrived

at college without the academic

background and personal

competencies that college

requires and that engaging

families early was one strategy

that was underutilized.

ADI formed a research council

that included eminent Chicagoans

Herbert J. Walberg, Benjamin

Bloom, Ralph Tyler, and James

Coleman to guide its work.

Over the next decade, 30

foundations and corporations

contributed to ADI’s work, and

its family engagement programs

leadership in education

From Academic Development

Institute, Vice President

for Institutional Advancement

Mark Williams

N

estled, almost hidden, above the Prairie Years Gift Shop in downtown

Lincoln is an influential and dynamic force for good in the national education

scene.

Continued

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