We can’t wait for the future.
Annual Report 2022 - 2023
“The future is a thought that can become a dream or a goal. There must be a plan or path to achieve them. College Track was a part of my plan and pathway to build a brighter future for myself. With the proper guidance and support, the next generation’s pathways and plans are unlimited, and they can reach their dreams and goals. The future is now, so help make it happen.”
DARIUS BROWN
College Track Oakland
San Jose State University, Master’s of Public Administration
Senior Development Officer, City of San Jose Use
the QR code to hear more from
about his journey as a
and
Darius
College Track scholar
alumnus.
Table of Contents
Message from our President & CEO 4 Our Vision, Mission, and Scholar Demographics 6 College Track Nation 8 Our Inaugural Cohort of College and University Partners 10 Our 10-Year Promise 12 Eyes on the Future, Right from the Start 14 Our Scholars’ Success 16 With Our Alumni, the Future Is Already Here 18 Activating Educational Equity with will.i.am 20 Funding the Future 22 Donors 25 College Track Board of Directors College Track Ambassadors
2
DEAR COLLEGE TRACK COMMUNITY
Our movement to democratize potential is gaining momentum. Last year, we hit a milestone number of 5,000 College Track scholars and alumni. 5,000 talented, driven young people from underestimated communities who have either achieved their dream of earning a bachelor’s degree or are on their way toward that goal.
5,000 is a significant number—not because of the quantity, but because of what it represents: anticipation.
We understand that vast potential lies within each of our scholars. That the desire to go to college exists—but so do systemic barriers that make it more difficult, more challenging for them to find success.
That’s why we make a 10-year promise to every one of our scholars, standing beside them for a decade as they navigate a path through high school and college, and into their careers. We are the most comprehensive college success program because of the longevity of our commitment. Because we believe that our pledge to them must reflect the gravity of the barriers they seek to surmount.
Last year, the United States Supreme Court decided to end race-conscious admissions in higher education—putting yet another barrier in place for scholars such as ours. Moments like this affirm the critical importance of our work—and mobilize us to double down. You’ll read in this report some of the ways that we are moving the
needle on educational equity through key partnerships, innovative experiences, and our holistic, 10-year program.
One in five students from under-resourced communities who enroll in college will graduate. This has a very deep generational impact on families across the country. When our scholars earn a bachelor’s degree, they amplify possibility within their families, communities, and professional spaces. Driven by a sense of connection, they leverage their voice and talent to mobilize a life of opportunity, choice, purpose, and power.
Because you invest in College Track, you make educational equity a reality for more of America. You invest in the leaders of today and tomorrow who will fuel progress in our country—the artists, entrepreneurs, innovators, and scientists who are shifting the dialogue toward solutions that can only come when we listen to the voices of people from all walks of life.
Our scholars and alumni have us on the edge of our seats. And we can’t wait for the future.
In community and with deep gratitude,
Shirley M. Collado, Ph.D. President & CEO
2 | COLLEGETRACK.ORG
We celebrated the grand opening of our new College Track headquarters and Oakland center in 2023. This flagship space reflects our deep commitment to creating—nationwide—affirming spaces for our high school scholars to engage with our program, and a place that feels like home to all of our scholars, alumni, families, and staff.
We can’t wait for the future.
At College Track, we believe that a college degree can be the key to unlocking a future filled with opportunity, choice, purpose, and power. For each of our 5,000+ scholars and alumni, we can’t wait for that future to arrive.
Since our founding in 1997, we have partnered with talented students from underserved and underestimated communities who are determined to be the first in their family to earn a bachelor’s degree.
And as the world has evolved, so have we.
College Track has redesigned our program to provide a broader array of tools, resources, and opportunities to our scholars as they move along their journeys to and through college.
Today, we are building an incredible ecosystem that includes meaningful curricula, innovative partnerships, career and life planning, mentorship, peer-to-peer engagement, and much more—all to foster a brighter, more equitable future for scholars across the country.
4 | COLLEGETRACK.ORG
OUR SCHOLAR DEMOGRAPHICS
UNDISCLOSED
OUR VISION
Our scholars amplify talent within their communities and inspire a movement to democratize potential.
92% First Generation
86% From Low-Income Communities
OUR MISSION
To equip students confronting systemic barriers to earn a bachelor’s degree in pursuit of a life of opportunity, choice, purpose, and power.
WHO WE SERVE
TOTAL SCHOLARS
2,326 High School Scholars
1,552 College Scholars
1,181 College Graduates
ANNUAL REPORT 2022 - 2023 | 5
1 % 63 % FEMALE MALE 36 %
LATINX AFRICAN AMERICAN ASIAN AMERICAN MULTIRACIAL OTHER 49 % 14 % 30 % 3 % 3 %
from FY23, which ended June 30, 2023
Data
College Track Nation
Since College Track’s first cohort of high school scholars from East Palo Alto began to pursue their bachelor’s degrees in 2001, our scholars have graduated from or attended more than 300 colleges and universities around the country, in nearly every state. The list at the right represents a sample of the many institutions that comprise College Track Nation.
Our communities have expanded, too—growing from one to 12 over the past 25 years, and
establishing our coast-to-coast presence in California, Colorado, Louisiana, Maryland, and Washington, D.C.
And in 2023, we honed our approach to college and university partnerships, announcing formalized agreements with 14 schools who share our commitment to the success of first-generation scholars from underserved communities. Read more about our approach on pages 8 and 9.
6 | COLLEGETRACK.ORG
College Track Locations
Inaugural Cohort Partner Institution
Alabama
Tuskegee University
Arizona
Arizona State
University-Tempe
Northern Arizona University
California
California State University - Los Angeles
California State University - San Francisco
University of California - Berkeley
University of California-Davis
University of California-Merced
University of California - Santa Cruz
University of San Francisco
University of Southern California
Colorado
Colorado State University – Global
Colorado State University – Fort Collins
Colorado State University – Pueblo
University of Colorado
Boulder
University of Colorado
Denver/Anschutz Medical Campus
Connecticut
Trinity College
Wesleyan University
Yale University
Delaware
Delaware State University
District of Columbia
American University
Georgetown University
Howard University
Florida
Florida Atlantic University
University of Miami
Georgia
Clark Atlanta University
Spelman College
Hawaii
University of Hawaii at Manoa
Illinois
Northwestern University
University of Chicago
Indiana
University of Notre Dame
Kansas
Tabor College
Louisiana
Dillard University
Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College
Tulane University of Louisiana
University of Louisiana at Lafayette
University of New Orleans
Maryland
Bowie State University
Coppin State University
Goucher College
Morgan State University
St. Mary’s College of Maryland
Massachusetts
Montana
University of Great Falls
Nebraska
Creighton University
Nevada
University of Nevada – Las Vegas
New Hampshire
Dartmouth College
New York
Bard College
Columbia University
North Carolina
Davidson College
Wake Forest University
Ohio
Case Western Reserve University
Oklahoma
Oklahoma Panhandle University
Oregon
Lewis & Clark College
Pennsylvania
Franklin and Marshall College
Lycoming College
University of Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
Brown University
South Carolina
University of South Carolina – Beaufort
Tennessee
Vanderbilt University
Texas
Paul Quinn College
University of Houston
Utah
Western Governors University
Vermont
Middlebury
Virginia
Hampton University
Washington
Seattle University
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
ANNUAL REPORT 2022 - 2023 | 7
Harvard University
College
Smith
Kalamazoo College
Carleton College Macalester College
Tougaloo College Missouri University of Missouri – Columbia
East Palo Alto.............................................1997 Oakland..................................................... 2002 San Francisco........................................... 2007 New Orleans............................................. 2008 Aurora.........................................................2011 Boyle Heights.............................................2012 Sacramento............................................... 2014 Watts.......................................................... 2015 Denver....................................................... 2016 Prince George’s County............................ 2018 Southeast D.C............................................2019 Crenshaw District..................................... 2020 OUR NATIONAL EXPANSION
Building a Sense of Belonging Together
There’s been a lot of buzz in the higher education sector around “a sense of belonging”—a student’s feeling of being a part of their campus community. Finding that can be a challenge for firstgeneration college students, particularly on campuses that were not built for the success of learners from all walks of life.
That’s why College Track is intentionally pursuing partners within the higher education sector who share our belief in the strength and necessity of our scholars’ voices and talents.
At the outset of the 2023-24 academic year, we announced formal partnerships with 14 institutions, ranging from small liberal arts colleges to research universities to historically black colleges and universities. Regardless of location or demographics, each has a deep dedication to the success of firstgeneration college students from underserved and underestimated communities.
Partnership agreements have primarily focused on the establishment of pathways for cohorts of College Track
scholars to matriculate to each institution with ample financial supports. Another key aspect of our agreements indicates its level of importance: cabinet-level administrators at each institution directly partner with College Track to ensure each cohort’s success.
Our investment in cultivating a sense of belonging for our scholars begins before college, at our 12 sites around the nation. We emphasize affirming, wellequipped spaces that enable us to deliver our program with integrity. And in 2023, we celebrated the grand opening of our flagship Oakland location— which serves as a program site and our organization’s national headquarters.
Our scholars, whether in high school or college, deserve access to environments and experiences that enable them to learn, grow, and thrive. We can’t wait for the nation’s educational ecosystem to catch up, so we’re creating the future we want to see now—with our scholars at the center of it all.
8 | COLLEGETRACK.ORG
OUR INAUGURAL COHORT OF PARTNER COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES
College Track moves into 2024 alongside 14 colleges and universities who share our commitment to educational equity. Each partner institution has established pathways for cohorts of College Track scholars to join their campus communities, offers financial support, and provides dedicated spaces on their campus for our scholars.
We don’t simply believe in the superpowers that firstgeneration college students bring to classrooms and communities—together, we make an investment in their lives and futures.
TUAJUANDA C. JORDAN, P h D President, St. Mary’s College of Maryland
“The timing of our partnership with College Track could not be better. The country has been talking about the ‘enrollment cliff’ for the last several years, while we at St. Mary’s College of Maryland have been preparing for the demographic shift in the college-going population for the entirety of my tenure here.
“We are proud to be in the cohort of 14 institutions partnered with College Track to enhance opportunities for first-generation college students. College Track’s commitment to providing resources and support for underserved students all through their college journey pairs well with our commitment to providing all students access to an affordable, rigorous education blended with professional skill development.
“The relationships College Track is building, with St. Mary’s College and others, strengthens these commitments and widens the paths we individually have been paving for a diverse array of students to achieve success in higher education and beyond.”
ANNUAL REPORT 2022 - 2023 | 9
Our 10-Year Promise
College Track is the most comprehensive college completion program in the nation. We begin our relationship with scholars during their first year in high school and extend our commitment through the start of their careers. We welcome all students who have a desire to be the first in their family to earn a bachelor’s degree, regardless of GPA, test scores, or quality of high school.
Our scholar sites are intentionally located in 12 communities around the country that are filled with untapped and underestimated talent. High school students access our program at these sites, which also serve as a home base for our college scholars, alumni, and families.
Our 10-year program is specifically designed to be integrated and holistic at every phase. High school scholars gain the academic, social, and practical skills necessary to matriculate to college. College scholars access networks, mentoring, and coaching so they can thrive on their chosen campus. Alumni engage with one another and scholars to sustain a vibrant, intergenerational community. Career planning and life design are built into every stage of the journey.
We believe that a sustained, individual investment in talented young people can mobilize a movement to change the future of our country. Our scholars and alumni demonstrate that every day.
College Track’s Integrated Program
High School: Years 1–4
Our high school scholar experience consists of two focused two-year segments: the Pre-College Program, for grades 9 and 10, and the College-Going Program, for grades 11 and 12. Both emphasize academic excellence, social-emotional wellness, financial education, and identity, purpose, and career exploration.
Pre-College Program
Dynamic and inspiring programming lays the foundation for scholar journeys toward opportunity, choice, purpose, and power. It includes:
• Goal setting and skill building to develop leadership
• Academic Learning Labs, including STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts, and mathematics) and 21stcentury skill development
10 | COLLEGETRACK.ORG
College-Going Program
Scholars grow the skills needed to achieve their dreams and passions through programs such as:
• Expert counseling around complex college admissions and financial aid processes
• Arizona State University’s Universal Learner Courses for earning college credits and developing professional skills
• Semester Zero at Northern Arizona University, a weeklong on-campus living and learning experience in the summer before the 11th grade
College: Years 5–8
Our College Thrive program is designed to equip scholars to achieve their goal of graduating with a bachelor’s degree and prepare for their next chapter.
• College Thrive Coaches ensure that college scholars are supported in achieving their academic, personal, and professional goals.
• Scholars design a career plan with access to coaching, application material preparation, professional experiences, and an exploration of different sectors.
• Virtual, national Life Design Workshops address topics like financial wellness, workplace expectations, and self-advocacy.
Alumni and Career: Years 9 – 10+
At every stage of our scholars’ journey, we integrate careerreadiness into our program. When our scholars become alumni, they realize the potential for social mobility that comes with a bachelor’s degree, while remaining connected to the College Track community.
• Local mixers, regional summits, and annual gatherings reinforce and support our alumni communities across the country.
• Our Alumni Volunteer Network, Regional Alumni Leadership groups, and Alumni Council sustain relationships between alumni and scholars.
• Our Alumni Leadership Series and “19:97 Alumni Spotlights” provide continuous learning opportunities, touching on personal and professional topics.
ANNUAL REPORT 2022 - 2023 | 11
A CASE FOR CAREER READINESS
Flexible competencies are critical for our scholars’ success after they gain a bachelor’s degree. Our program ensures that no matter what field our scholars ultimately pursue, they walk into professional spaces with leadership and executive functioning skills.
Today’s careers won’t be tomorrow’s. College Track’s 10year promise ensures our scholars will adapt and thrive—wherever the future takes them.
67 percent of college graduates in the United States report that the jobs they applied to required a degree
49 percent of college graduates nationwide feel underqualified for entry-level jobs
Only 25 percent of recent grads in the U.S. would pursue the same education path
12 | COLLEGETRACK.ORG
Cengage Group, 2022
Eyes on the Future, Right from the Start
Getting to and through college is one thing. Succeeding afterwards? That’s a challenge all its own—one that College Track’s scholars are well equipped to meet.
From the moment our scholars join our community in the ninth grade, our program gets them thinking about life after a bachelor’s degree: the life of opportunity, choice, purpose, and power that our scholars aspire to.
Our Career and Life Design curriculum, which spans all stages of our program, centers values- and identity-building, establishing both as the foundation of career readiness. We ask scholars to dig deep and think about what impact they want to have on the world, and then we work with them as they realize their dreams. Each year, scholars participate in programming that develops career competencies which help differentiate them from their peers.
Our high school program provides career exploration and career competency-building opportunities— all intentionally designed to hone our scholars’ interests. When our scholars move into college, they design a unique
career plan through a collaboration with their College Thrive Coaches, exploring opportunities in different sectors. The role that our corporate and nonprofit partners play in this layer of our scholars’ journeys is critical. High-quality internships, networking opportunities, and interactive panels build connections with established professionals that are essential for career success—connections that do not organically exist for many firstgeneration college graduates from underserved communities.
“The support at College Track has given me courage as a firstgeneration college student and has really opened my eyes to opportunities I didn’t know existed for me. They have given me the courage, reassurance, and comfort to pursue the dreams I have created for myself that I never knew could be possible.”
CHIMAMAKA
College Track Aurora
University of Colorado, Boulder, Bachelor’s Candidate
ANNUAL REPORT 2022 - 2023 | 13
Our Scholars’ Success
College Track equips talented high school and college students to achieve their biggest dreams and live purposeful lives. And every day, we are amazed and inspired by all the ways they unleash their limitless potential.
Since our first class of ninth graders matriculated to college in 2001, 54 percent of College Track scholars have graduated with a bachelor’s degree
within six years—more than 2.5 times the national average for first-generation college students from underserved communities.
As we continue to evolve and expand our programs to equip more scholars on their educational journeys, we celebrate their remarkable successes inside and outside the classroom.
“My family is a big part of who I am, so getting a higher education is like they’re getting a higher education. It makes me feel proud that we’re getting a bachelor’s degree together.”
DAISY
College Track East
Palo Alto
University of California
Berkeley, Bachelor’s
Candidate
14 | COLLEGETRACK.ORG
SIX-YEAR COLLEGE GRADUATION RATE
First-Generation and Students from Low-Income Communities
3.5 Average high school senior GPA at graduation
98% Four-year college acceptance rate for Class of 2023
97% Two-year or four-year college matriculation rate for Class of 2023
89% College persistence rate for Class of 2022
ANNUAL REPORT 2022 - 2023 | 15 STARTING INSTITUTION: FOUR-YEAR STARTING INSTITUTION: TWO-YEAR OR FOUR-YEAR 40 % 21 % 63 % 54 % NATIONAL AVERAGE COLLEGE TRACK
The Future Is Already Here
Just as College Track scholars in high school and college are the leaders of the future, our alumni have already become the leaders of today.
From business to education, government, science and technology, culture and the arts, our alumni are growing into leadership roles across the nation. Many of them launched their careers by participating in internships, equipping them to absorb knowledge, network, and begin shifting their own perceptions and those of their colleagues.
They are role models for their communities and families, demonstrating the power of commitment and mobilizing a vision of equity. Through collaboration, bold thinking, and earnest advocacy, they are pursuing change in every sector of the American economy and society.
In classrooms, boardrooms, science labs, and C-suites, College Track alumni are showing America that it doesn’t have to wait for a brilliant future—it’s ready to go, right here, right now.
“I am excited to see my generation of College Track peers become the next generation of leaders across sectors, and lead in a way that honors and invests in the places we come from. I cannot wait to do so in my professional work investing in social innovators, and I cannot wait to support the leaders in my College Track community doing similarly in their own fields.”
LEYA
College Track San Francisco Stanford University, Bachelor of Science Manager, Echoing Green
16 | COLLEGETRACK.ORG
89 %
89% Employed or in graduate school
80 %
80% Employed within one year of graduation
AVERAGE DEBT FOR RECENT GRADUATES BY RACE
1 in 3 Recent graduates completes college with zero debt
93 %
93% Had internal advancement opportunities within the past year
ANNUAL REPORT 2022 - 2023 | 17 LATINX ASIAN AMERICAN AFRICAN AMERICAN
7,768
8,648
ALUMNI OUTCOMES
$
$
$ 23,622
Activating Educational Equity i n Boyle Heights
Futurist and Philanthropist will.i.am’s Partnership with College Track
In 2012, 53 ninth-grade students from Boyle Heights’ Roosevelt High School formed the first cohort of College Track scholars in the City of Los Angeles. College Track expanded to Los Angeles that year as part of a partnership with the i.am Angel Foundation, established in 2011 by global music artist, philanthropist, and futurist will.i.am.
i.am College Track was one of the first investments of the i.am Angel Foundation—and a way for will.i.am to change the narrative
around educational equity in the community where he grew up. While his mother and uncles attended public school in Boyle Heights, will.i.am did not. He was bussed out of his neighborhood to attend science magnet schools in more affluent parts of the city. That experience demonstrated a hard truth about education in our country: talent is everywhere, but opportunity is not. Students don’t choose their ZIP codes—those living in underserved communities become trapped in chronically
under-funded and underperforming public schools. will.i.am continues to be a staunch advocate for educational equity, particularly in STEAM fields: Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Mathematics. He’s been honored for his activism and philanthropy in education, receiving the James C. Morgan Global Humanitarian Award in 2023, and the TIME 100 Impact Award in 2022. He has been a member of College Track’s Board of Directors since 2016.
What is it about College Track that moved you to invest in and sustain such a strong and collaborative partnership?
Bolstering underserved students so they can succeed in school is a complex, long-term process. This partnership really delivers actionable results. Each of our students participating in the i.am College Track program graduates from high school, and 98% go on to pursue a college degree. Watching cohort after cohort leave us to go to college, and hearing
positive stories from our college graduates, is the motivation that keeps us going!
How do you see Boyle Heights changing as a result of your investment?
The mindset in Boyle Heights is shifting to a much more confident one, and we have the data to prove it. High school graduation rates are up, and the percentage of students going onward to pursue a college degree continues to rise. Students who graduate from college return
home to join the workforce or start their own business. When our scholars who are still in high school watch their success and achievements, it reinforces the belief that “Yes, we can do it!”
When you think of the future for young people in Boyle Heights, what gets you excited? What can you not wait for?
I can’t wait for every student in Boyle Heights to have access to our outstanding 10-year program. Our scholars are the
18 | COLLEGETRACK.ORG
Q&A WITH WILL.I.AM
first in their families to go to college, so the team at Boyle Heights is a vital resource for scholars as they navigate through the process, from researching schools that offer programs they want to pursue, to understanding the grade requirements, to applying, to seeking out scholarships and financial aid.
The most important thing that the i.am College Track Center in Boyle Heights instills in our students is self-confidence. I see that grow within our students every year, in every cohort. Equipped with a can-do positive mindset and strong academics, our students are on the path to success in school and in life.
ANNUAL REPORT 2022 - 2023 | 19
will.i.am enjoys a moment with i.am College Track’s powerhouse robotics team.
Funding the Future
College Track serves nearly 5,100 scholars and alumni across the United States. We can’t wait to see the future that these remarkable scholars will create for themselves, their communities, and our nation.
We know that to maintain their momentum, we must also maintain ours and remain committed to our mission to democratize potential.
By focusing on our scholars and our communities while embracing educational innovation, we can equip them for success that endures for not just years, but generations. This commitment is matched by that of our partners and supporters.
As stewards of their generous investments, we hold ourselves to the highest standards of financial sustainability and strategic, data-driven decision-making.
Together with our partners, we know that an incredible future is within reach.
FINANCIAL INFORMATION
Data for fiscal year ending June 30, 2023.
20 | COLLEGETRACK.ORG
REVENUE AMOUNT PERCENTAGE (%) Individual Donations $5,268,701 10.8% Foundations and Trusts $29,609,406 60.8% Corporate Support $11,150,421 22.9% Government Grants $1,416,222 2.9% Other Revenue $1,280,279 2.6% Total Revenue $48,725,029 EXPENSES AMOUNT PERCENTAGE (%) Programs $30,859,679 77.2% General and Administrative $5,472,035 13.7% Fundraising $3,621,732 9.1% Total Expenses $39,953,446 Change in Net Assets $8,771,583
“College Track is not just a program, it is a lifestyle, a process. The process works but nevertheless you must work the process, so if you put in the effort, time and dedication, then you too can do everything you were destined for.”
JAHEIM
College Track at the Durant Center
Lafayette College, Bachelor’s Candidate
ANNUAL REPORT 2022 - 2023 | 21
Our Donors
$250,000+
Anonymous
Lynn Feintech & Tony Bernhardt
A. James & Alice B. Clark Foundation
The Ron Conway Family
Danhakl Family Foundation
Dhanam Foundation
Durant Family Foundation
ECMC Foundation
Emerson Collective
The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation
i.am Angel Foundation
JPMorgan Chase & Co.
Len Hill Charitable Trust
Prince George’s County Public Schools
Salesforce
Diana Kapp & David B. Singer
Skyline Foundation
Tipping Point Community
University of Southern California
Chris & Nina Wanstrath
The Anne Wojcicki Foundation
$249,999–$100,000
Anonymous
Aurora Public Schools
Banneker Ventures
California Community Foundation
Centura Health Foundation
Brian Chesky
Tim Cook
Crankstart Foundation
Electronic Arts Inc.
Amy & John Fowler
The Joe K. Gardner Memorial Fund
The Giannandrea Family Fund
Hearst
Jony & Heather Ive
The Johnson Family
Kaiser Foundation Hospital Fund for Community Benefit Programs at the East Bay Community Foundation
Klarich Family Fund of the Silicon Valley Community Foundation
M. Klein & Company
Koret Foundation
Laluyaux Foundation
Learn24
Marks Family Foundation
Oakland Fund for Children & Youth
Quest Foundation
Michael Rantz
San Francisco Department of Children, Youth & Their Families
Tom Steyer
S. Mark Taper Foundation
U.S. Bank Foundation
Wasserman Foundation
Webb Family Foundation
Why Not You Foundation
Melissa & Jeff Williams
$99,999–$50,000 A+E Networks
Anonymous
Baptist Community Ministries
Kirsten & Michael Beckwith
The Bisconti Family Foundation
Bloomberg Philanthropies
Marissa Mayer & Zachary Bogue
William K. Bowes, Jr. Foundation
Vera R. Campbell Foundation
Johnny Carson Foundation
Cartier
Sumir Chadha
Simone Otus Coxe & Tench Coxe
Denver Public Schools
Elena Silenok & Chris Dixon
Joseph Drown Foundation
Entergy Charitable Foundation
Evelyn & Norman Feintech Family Foundation
The Fernandez Foundation
Lisa & Patrice Gautier
Glass Half Full Fund
Fairfax Dorn & Marc Glimcher
Goldman Sachs & Co.
Debra, Chloe, Allegra & Bing Gordon
Lisa & Kenny Jackson
Kennedy Wilson
KLA Foundation
Erica & Jeff Lawson
Mazda Foundation
Mildenhall Gros Family
22 | COLLEGETRACK.ORG
James V. & June P. Diller Family Foundation
Sarah Schoellkopf & William Neil
Greg Powell
Mindy & Jesse Rogers
Leesa & Martin Romo
The Rose Hills Foundation
Ralph Smith
Warriors Community Foundation
$49,999–$25,000
Amgen Foundation
Anonymous
The Anschutz Foundation
Booth-Bricker Fund
Jihan Bowes-Little
Diane McDaniel & Philippe Browning
Capital Group
The Chrysalis Fund
CityBridge
Carol and James Collins Foundation
Colonial Parking
Concrete Value Corp
Topher Conway
Daniels Fund
DC Housing Finance Agency
Deloitte
Roberta & Steve Denning
The Fardshisheh Family
Bob Friedman
Alex Beckman / GameOn Technology
Joseph Gebbia
Gelberg Signs
Philip B. Goldberg Fund of the Denver Foundation
Maud and Burton Goldfield Family Foundation
Graham Holdings Company
Greenbridge Family Foundation
The HAND Foundation, Noosheen Hashemi & Farzad Nazem
HEP Construction
Traci & Monty Hoffman
Mark Hughes Foundation
JMA Solutions Inc.
Franklin and Catherine Johnson Foundation
Jordan Brand–A Division of Nike, Inc.
The Mayer & Morris Kaplan Family Foundation
Eric & Suyun Kim Charitable Fund
The Kimball Foundation
Rich Kleiman
Elizabeth & Darell Krasnoff
Eugene M. Lang Foundation
Renate & George Lee
Lynn & Ted Leonsis
Mellody Hobson & George Lucas
MaC Venture Capital / MACRO
Sandi & Joe Martignetti
Maverick Capital Charities
Mayfield
Nora & Marc Mazur
M.C. Dean
Irene Mecchi
Monumental Sports & Entertainment Foundation
The Moriah Fund
MRP Realty
The Kenneth T. and Eileen L. Norris Foundation
The Paige Foundation
Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP
Chris Paul Family Foundation
The Peery Foundation
Ranadivé Foundation
Redbrick LMD, LLC
Laura & Jeff Robbin
RosaMary Foundation
Rosewood Family Advisors LLP
Scheidel Foundation
Oliver Schusser
Cynthia & Bruce Sewell
Silicon Valley Community Foundation
Laura & Greg Spivy
Dwight Stuart Youth Fund
The Swig Company
TwentyFirstCenturyBrand
United Way of Southeast Louisiana
Hilary Valentine
Mark Williams
Amy & Geoff Yang
$24,999–$10,000
#HalfMyDAF
2U, Inc DC
Advanced Energy
Russlynn Ali
Anonymous
An Anonymous Fund of MCF
Bank of America
Benevity
Girija & Dr. Larry Brilliant
Cristel de Rouvray & Jonathan Bruck
CAA Foundation
Caesars Foundation
CAM Foundation
Capital One
Celesta Foundation
Charles Schwab Foundation
Closed Loop
College Futures Foundation
Shelley de Rouvray
Ray and Dagmar Dolby Fund
Fern Mandelbaum & Dan Dorosin
Dunn Family Charitable Foundation
Enterprise Holdings Foundation
Beth & Nathan Esch
Frost Foundation
William G. Gilmore Foundation
Greater New Orleans Foundation’s IMPACT Program
Diane Greene
Greve-Kahn Charitable Fund
Margaret & David Hensler
Mr. Michael P. N. A. Hormel
The Hurlbut-Johnson Charitable Trusts
The Katus-Nelson Family
Kelly Foundation
Sara Johnson Kerrest & Frederic Kerrest
Dan Kingsley
Nick & Natasha Lawler
LiveRamp
Los Angeles Dodgers Foundation
Marqeta
MGM Resorts Foundation
The Nussdorf Family Foundation
The Oakland Athletics Community Fund
Gloria Principe & John O’Farrell
ANNUAL REPORT 2022 - 2023 | 23
Gayle Saldinger & Ed O’Neil
Perkins Coie Foundation
Pro Bono Publico Foundation
Elisabeth & Scott Roberts
Parvati Del Razo & Alejandro Roman
Stephen & Sandy Rosenthal Fund
Nicole & Amir Rubin
The Eileen and Fred Schoellkopf Family Foundation
The Selley Foundation Fund
Judi Smith
Vanessa & Chris Spencer
Douglas Spreng Fund
TJX Companies, Inc.
Union Bank
University of California-Merced
Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati Foundation
$9,999–$5,000
Anonymous
Eran Ashany
John Audino
Esmeralda Ayala
The Blecharczyk Family
Christina & Benjamin Bullock
Shirley M. Collado, Ph.D. & A. Van Jordan
Diane Harwood & Andy Dreyfus
Sakurako & William Fisher
Flora Family Foundation
Foulger-Pratt
Chuck Gately
The John & Marcia Goldman Foundation
Allegra Gordon
Sandra Luo & Mudit Goyal
Judith Ward & Rod Hall
IMA Foundation
Eve & Ross Jaffe
Kabacoff Family Foundation
Cynthia & Bert Keely
Katie Hall & Tom Knutsen
LionTree LLC
LSP Family Foundation
Nancy & Tom Lue
The Luzzatto Company
Jennifer Palmieri & Jim Lyons
Michael Marchetti
Worthy McCartney
Malcolm & Katie McDermid
Jose Mena
Mikuni Charitable Organization
Modern Bay Strategies
Northern Arizona University Foundation Inc.
Wendy & Ted Ramsey
Susan Lewis & Joseph Reventas
Maria Luisa & Max Rhodes
Anne Marie Burgoyne & Brad Roberts
J.Y. Sanders Foundation
Sinclair M. Skinner
Claire E. Stryker
Roselyne C. Swig
Renee & Owen Taylor
Tecumseh Foundation
Thermo Fisher
Cynthia & Nathan Torinus
Jeanne Tschann
Umpqua Bank Charitable Foundation
Ventana Property Services Community
Eric Murphy & Tim Wu
$4,999–$1,000
Anonymous
Arizona State University-Tempe
Sandra Bagnatori
Jessica Goldberg & Jason Bandlow
Juliet M. Tomkins & Prescott H. Bergh
Kelsey & Mitch Brady
Susan S. Browne & Peter D. Browne
Mr. John Solomon & Dr. Caroline Buckway
Amy & Grady Burnett
Wilfrido Loor Canizares
Samuel Chung
Charles Cycon
Arne and Karen Duncan Fund at The Chicago Community Foundation
Eliot Family Fund
Dayana Alvarado Escobedo
Adrian Fenty
Laura & John Fisher
Darlene & Rodney Fong
Nancy Friedman
Dr. Mildred Garcia, in memory of my parents Léopold and Lucy Garcia
Friends of Joe Gardner
Catherine Gewertz
Give Lively Foundation, Inc.
Google Foundation
Christine Goppel
Chad Griffin
The Halstedt Family Advised Fund, an affiliate of the Fulcrum Foundation
Douglas Jackson-Quzack
Joe’s Kickball Friends
JSG
Robert Kapp
Timothy Knowles
John Kosich
Annie & James LaPlante
Leading Culture Solutions
James Van Leeuwen
Cindy & Richard Leibovitch
Rafe Lepre
Steve Levine
Debbra & Donald Lindo
Lionsgate
Amanda Schapel & Patrick Marks
Bonnie Matlock
Pragna & Madhukar Mehta
Microsoft
Mile High United Way
Anne & King Milling
Lily & Riaz Moledina
Elena Hale & Chuck Monn
Tracey Briscoe Monroe
Benjamin Orwin
Angel Perez
The Pietri Family
Tracey & Brad Powell
Paige Pritchard
Qualcomm
Barbara Reis
Joel & Barbara Renbaum
Jose Luis Cruz Rivera
Loren Rodgers
Anthony Rodriguez
Lauren Lax & Daniel Rosenfeld
24 | COLLEGETRACK.ORG
Amy A. Ross, Ph.D.
Michael & Denise Salisbury
Katie Albright & Jake Schatz
Nicole Taylor & Steve Seleznow
Snap Inc.
Araceli & Eric Solis
Michael Sorrell
Starbucks
Kathryn Stivers
The Tangherlini Family
Sarah & Jay Thayer
Hollis Harris & Tim Tomashek
Mallory & Schuyler Ullman
Ellen Goldsmith-Vein & Jon Vein
Pic D. Walker
Dr. Ann Tsukamoto-Weissman & Dr. Irving Weissman
Madeline & Rod West
Candice & Eric Williams
Jennifer Hom & Jiang Wu
Catherine Sanger & Brandon Yoder
Alex Zorn
College Track Board of Directors
Laurene Powell Jobs Chair and Co-Founder
David B. Singer Vice Chair
Omar Karim Secretary
William Adams (will.i.am)
Toyin Ajayi
Esme Ayala
Michael Beckwith
Lynn Feintech
Charles King
Darell Krasnoff
Debbra Lindo
Marc Mazur
Michael Sorrell, Ed.D.
Tim Wu
College Track Ambassadors
Andy Dreyfus
Mildred García, Ed.D.
Cynthia Keely
Eric Kim
Marshall Lott
Nancy Lue
ANNUAL REPORT 2022 - 2023 | 25
483 9th Street, Suite 200, Oakland, CA 94607 COLORADO
Aurora 15559 E Iliff Avenue Aurora, CO 80013 (720) 748-7736
Denver
4777 National Western Drive Denver, CO 80216 (757) 903-9380 D.C.
Prince George’s County
5001 Silver Hill Road Suite 106
Suitland, MD 20746 (301) 453-5510
Southeast D.C. 620 Milwaukee Place S.E. Washington, DC 20032 (202) 810-2746
Boyle Heights
2130 E. First Street, Suite 2700 Los Angeles, CA 90033 (323) 360-0730
Crenshaw District 3626 11th Avenue
Los Angeles, CA 90018 (323) 318-3770
Watts
2265 E. 103 Street
Los Angeles, CA 90002 (323) 621-6740 ext. 230 NEW ORLEANS
New Orleans
2225 Congress Street fl 2 New Orleans, LA 70117 (504) 577-2021
East Palo Alto 1877 Bay Road
East Palo Alto, CA 94303 (650) 614-4875
Oakland
483 9th Street
Suite 200 Oakland, CA 94607
Sacramento 2450 Alhambra Boulevard
Suite 100
Sacramento, CA 95817 (916) 287-8624
San Francisco 4301 3rd Street
San Francisco, CA 94124 (415) 206-9995
@collegetrack | collegetrack.org | 510.834.3295 College Track Headquarters
METRO AREA
LOS ANGELES
CALIFORNIA
NORTHERN