Students in more than 1,300 high schools across 32 states will
receive a free device and free wireless service in first year of the
program

Company Website:
http://www.sprint.com
OVERLAND PARK, Kan. -- (Business Wire)
As the new school year begins across the country, 180,000 low-income
high school students will receive the equipment and connectivity they
need to complete their schoolwork from home as part of the 1Million
Project. The Sprint Foundation, with support from Sprint (NYSE:S),
announced that the first year of the initiative, kicking off Aug. 15,
will include more than 1,300 schools across 32 states providing 180,000
students with free devices and wireless service for up to four years
while in high school. During the course of the 5-year program, up to 1
million high schoolers who lack internet access at home will join the
1Million Project, helping to level the playing field and eliminate the
“Homework Gap.”
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The 1Million Project in Year 1 (Photo: Business Wire)
Seventy percent of America’s high school teachers assign homework that
requires online connectivity, yet more than 5 million families with
school-aged students do not have internet connectivity at home.1 These
students face an enormous challenge in trying to complete their homework
from home, search for jobs, apply to college and financial aid, or
easily access the valuable information they need to succeed in school
and life.
“Sprint is uniquely positioned to help make a difference in these kids’
lives immediately and on a massive level, and that’s exactly what we’re
doing,” said Sprint CEO Marcelo Claure. “In less than a year, we’ve gone
from conceiving and piloting the 1Million Project to implementing it in
order to help hundreds of thousands of high school students across the
country this school year.”
Some of the country’s largest school districts will participate in the
first year of the 1Million Project during the 2017-18 school year,
including:
-
New York City Department of Education (NY)
-
Miami-Dade County Public Schools (FL)
-
Los Angeles Unified School District (CA)
-
Chicago Public Schools (IL)
-
Phoenix Union High School District 210 (AZ)
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DeKalb County School District (GA)
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Baltimore City Public Schools (MD)
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Newark Public Schools (NJ)
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Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools (NC)
-
Oakland Unified School District (CA)
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Broward County Public Schools (FL)
See the full
list of all participating schools and school districts, as well as
images and video content.
“For today’s schoolchildren, smartphones are an essential tool for
classroom performance, helping students with everything from
communicating with teachers and counselors via email to conducting
research for assignments and compiling reports and presentations,”
said Richard Buery, deputy mayor for New York City. “As a city that
lives on-the-go, the investment of 30,000 smartphone devices will be
invaluable to students attending community schools and will help us
achieve equity and excellence in the classroom by leveling the playing
field on academic achievement. We thank Sprint for their partnership and
for addressing the homework gap with the 1Million Project.”
“Not having access to the internet at home not only impacts students,
but it also hinders parents’ ability to communicate with teachers and
build a partnership with their child’s educators,” said Pedro Noguera,
distinguished professor of Education in the Graduate School of Education
and Information Sciences at UCLA and director of the Center for the
Study of School Transformation. “Ultimately, not having access to the
internet is an obstacle to opportunity – learning, jobs, college, and
contributing to society at a high-level.”
“Homework is very difficult to do without any internet at home, so I
used to spend countless hours in the computer labs at school or walking
to my aunt’s house to finish all of my assignments,” said Marleni, a
1Million Project pilot participant and recent graduate from Garey High
School in Pomona, California. “With my hotspot from the 1Million
Project, I actually didn’t have to worry about where to go after school,
and could get home at a reasonable time and do my homework in my room. I
was able to finish high school with tunnel vision on the work I needed
to complete, and am now moving on to college to pursue my goals.”
Each student participating in the 1Million Project will receive either a
free smartphone, tablet or hotspot device and 3GB of high-speed LTE data
per month for up to four years while they are in a participating high
school. Unlimited data is available at 2G speeds if usage exceeds 3GB in
a month. Those who receive a smartphone can use it as a hotspot.
To address the homework gap on such a large scale, Sprint piloted the
program with 3,750 high school students in 10 markets in January 2017
through the end of the last school year. Lessons learned at the local
level helped to prepare for the national rollout this fall. In a survey
of students who participated in the pilot, 86 percent said the 1Million
Project improved their attitude toward learning and school and helped
them do their homework in a comfortable, convenient and safe place.
Looking forward, 82 percent of students said the program positively
affected the likelihood that they will persist and graduate from high
school. And, 80 percent said it improved the likelihood that they will
continue on to college.
Schools or districts that want to apply for the second year of the
1Million Project, which begins with the 2018-19 school year, can visit www.sprint.com/1millionproject
to learn more. Applicants will receive a response by spring 2018.
“Not every student in our country has the equal opportunity to thrive
and grow,” said Doug Michelman, president of the 1Million Project. “We
are committed to doing our part to level the playing field for all those
high school students in need who want to work hard to achieve their
goals. As you might imagine, supporting 1 million students during the
next five years is a significant undertaking. Sprint is donating
wireless service, and the Sprint Foundation is working closely with our
device suppliers, and we are very thankful for their generous
contributions. But, without the help of generous donors, we can’t meet
our goal to help students reach their potential, do great things and
fulfill their dreams.”
During the past year, Sprint has worked with non-profit agencies,
including EveryoneOn and My Brother’s Keeper Alliance, to identify
cities and school districts with the greatest need and to develop
academic enrichment and measurement components of the program.
Sprint is donating approximately $2.16 billion in wireless service2,
technical support and staff to oversee the 1Million Project for five
years. The majority of devices for the first year of the program have
been donated to the Sprint Foundation by generous vendors, including TCT
Mobile US (Alcatel), American Network Solutions, LLC (ANS), Franklin
Wireless, LG Electronics MobileComm USA, Motorola Mobility LLC and ZTE
USA Inc.
Anyone looking to support the program can visit www.sprint.com/give1mp
to make a donation via credit card.2 Sprint stores continue
to accept monetary and device donations.3 Used mobile devices
can also be donated online. Devices will be recycled or resold with net
proceeds benefiting the 1Million Project. Visit www.sprint.com/1millionproject
for more information, and follow and support the program on social media
by using the hashtag #1MillionProject.
About The Sprint Foundation
Since its establishment in 1989, the Sprint Foundation (the
philanthropic arm of Sprint) has provided millions of dollars to
community organizations across the country. A separate legal entity from
Sprint, the Sprint Foundation has made a huge impact by supporting
hundreds of organizations each year that focus on education, arts and
culture, youth development, community development, and disaster relief.
During 2016, the Sprint Foundation, in partnership with Sprint, launched
a new signature program, the 1Million
Project, to help close the “Homework Gap” by providing free devices
and free high-speed internet connectivity to 1 million low-income high
school students (across five years) who lack home access to the
internet. The Sprint Foundation will support the 1Million Project by
purchasing new devices (smartphones, tablets, hotspots), providing
educational resources, administering the program, and funding program
training for eligible high school students.
About Sprint
Sprint (NYSE:S) is a communications services company that creates more
and better ways to connect its customers to the things they care about
most. Sprint served 53.7 million connections as of June 30, 2017, and is
widely recognized for developing, engineering and deploying innovative
technologies, including the first wireless 4G service from a national
carrier in the United States; leading no-contract brands including
Virgin Mobile USA, Boost Mobile, and Assurance Wireless; instant
national and international push-to-talk capabilities; and a global Tier
1 Internet backbone. Sprint has been named to the Dow Jones
Sustainability Index (DJSI) North America for the past five years. You
can learn more and visit Sprint at www.sprint.com
or www.facebook.com/sprint
and www.twitter.com/sprint.
1The Pew Research Center (http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2015/04/20/the-numbers-behind-the-broadband-homework-gap/).
2
Includes retail value of wireless service cost if all 1 million
high school students remain in the program for four years.
3
Cash donations for the 1Million Project are tax-deductible charitable
contributions to the Sprint Foundation.
4 Device
donations are not tax-deductible. Net proceeds from reselling/recycling
donated devices or $1 per device, whichever is greater, will be donated
to the program.

View source version on businesswire.com: http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20170814005275/en/
Contacts:
Sprint
Lisa Belot, 913-315-5730
lisa.belot@sprint.com
Source: Sprint
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