RAND study declares Gates's $575 million teacher effectiveness initiative a failure
A comprehensive RAND Corporation evaluation of the Gates Foundation's Intensive Partnerships for Effective Teaching — which spent $575 million from 2009 to 2016 testing whether data-driven teacher evaluation could improve student outcomes — concluded the program had failed to improve student achievement, graduation rates, or teacher retention in any of the three districts studied. Gates acknowledged the disappointing results, saying the Foundation had underestimated the complexity of changing deeply entrenched school systems. The study reinforced growing skepticism that technocratic, data-first approaches alone could transform public education.
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April 2026
Gates Foundation Announces External Governance Review and 20% Staff Reduction Amid Epstein Fallout
In April 2026, the Gates Foundation announced an independent external governance review led by former UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and two former US federal judges, tasked with examining Foundation oversight structures, donor transparency, and executive conduct policies. The Foundation simultaneously announced a 20% reduction in its global workforce — approximately 500 positions — citing the need to streamline operations. Foundation CEO Mark Suzman described the reductions as part of a 'strategic reset' unrelated to the Epstein scrutiny; critics and former staff disputed that characterization.
March 2026
US House Oversight Committee Issues Subpoena to Gates Foundation Over Epstein-Era Documents
In March 2026, the US House Committee on Oversight and Accountability issued a subpoena to the Gates Foundation demanding internal communications, grant records, and financial documents related to Jeffrey Epstein spanning 2010–2019. The committee gave the Foundation a 30-day compliance deadline. A Gates Foundation spokesperson said the organization was 'reviewing the request and committed to cooperating fully with legitimate oversight.' The subpoena focused specifically on whether Foundation grant decisions were influenced by Epstein and whether donor privacy obligations had been used to shield Epstein's involvement.
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