Denise Webb, 20, is a CoGenerate Senior Fellow. She’s a student at Berry College and a seasoned activist, working with organizations including United Way, Partnership for Southern Equity and The Sunrise Movement. She is the co-author of Why Aren’t We Doing This!...
Purpose Prize
The Latest from CoGenerate
What Young Leaders Want — And Don’t Want — From Older Allies
We know from our nationally representative study with NORC at the University of Chicago in 2022 that 76% of Gen Z and 70% of Millennial respondents wish they had more opportunities to work across generations for change. In a new report, What Young Leaders Want — And...
Two Oscar-winning Films Shine a Light on Intergenerational Connection
Despite the ongoing drumbeat of generational conflict (a hate story), right in front of us is evidence of a new narrative of cross-generational connection and collaboration (a love story). That love story was on full display at the Grammys, most visibly in the Tracy...
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Harold Haizlip
Purpose Prize Fellow 2008
Bringing in the arts to transform life for under-served public school children.
After more than 40 years as a teacher and education industry leader, Harold Haizlip was still dissatisfied with the impact he was having on disadvantaged students he believed had the power to succeed. As a member of a commission formed after the 1994 LA riots to address trauma the events had inflicted on schoolchildren, Haizlip proposed a unique intervention program – to use art as therapy. Haizlip brought the distant universe of art into the gritty lives of students at poor under-achieving Los Angeles elementary schools by introducing them to successful artists from their own communities. The LA’s BEST (Better Educated Students for Tomorrow) After School Enrichment Program keeps the youngsters off the streets, enriches them with subjects and activities they wouldn’t otherwise experience, and provides inspirational role models. LA’s BEST serves 26,000 students at 180 schools every school day at no cost to students or parents. Studies find the program has reduced absenteeism and produced significant gains in learning and skills and students’ sense of self-efficacy and self-empowerment, greater participation and success in school and classroom activities, and a dramatic increase of interest in the arts. Â “Over the years, I became increasingly dissatisfied with my lack of success in opening doors for low income students much like myself in my childhood. I never thought about giving up on this goal, regardless of my age.”