Six years ago, Mike Spangenberg was just a typical college kid who wanted to change the world. "I was big on social justice issues," he says. "I wanted to go to law school, because I thought that was the way to gain access to power."
Social inequality was what fired him most. "It seemed so clearly wrong to me that your ZIP code has such a profound impact on your chances in life," he says.
Then one day, during his senior year at the University of Connecticut, Spangenberg was paging through the campus newspaper while waiting for an English class to begin. An ad for Teach for America caught his eye. In a moment, his law school plans evaporated. "I thought, 'Here's my chance -- here's how I can do all the things I care about," he says. A few months later, he began what became four years of teaching in gritty, inner-city Philadelphia.
Now Spangenberg, who grew up in Maple Grove, is back in the Twin Cities. At age 27, he's continuing his crusade for educational equality as director of Stand Academy, a new charter school in downtown Minneapolis.
Stand Academy is one of a nationwide network of KIPP schools -- an acronym for Knowledge is Power Program. Founded in 1994, KIPP has grown to 66 schools, mostly grades five through eight, in 19 states.
Nationwide, more than 90 percent of KIPP students are black or Latino, and more than 80 percent are low income. In 2007, the average student who had been with KIPP for four years had moved from the 40th to the 82nd percentile in math, and from the 32nd to the 60th percentile in reading.
In Philadelphia, Spangenberg taught at a KIPP school for a year. There, he saw "what high expectations look like and what is possible," he says. After receiving a prestigious KIPP Fisher fellowship, he spent last year preparing to bring that success to Minnesota.
KIPP's approach to student recruitment illustrates its bold, innovative vision. In June, Spangenberg and Daisy Mitchell of the Twin Cities KIPP Coalition -- a group of community leaders who raised $550,000 to bring KIPP here -- began going door to door in north Minneapolis.