Board Members

Sherry Lansing, Founding Chair of the EnCorps Board of Directors and CEO - The Sherry Lansing Foundation

During almost 30 years in the motion picture business, Sherry Lansing was involved in the production, marketing and distribution of more than 200 films, including Academy Award® winners Forrest Gump (1994), Braveheart (1995), and the highest grossing movie of all time, Titanic (1997). In 1992, Lansing was named Chairman of Paramount Pictures and began an unprecedented tenure that lasted more than 12 years (1992 - 2005) during which the studio enjoyed enormous creative and financial success.

"I left Paramount at the ripe young age of sixty," notes Lansing. "A generation ago, that would have been retirement age. But my generation has more energy, more drive, and a greater life expectancy than any group of retirees before us. We are going to be here for two decades or more past 'retirement' age and we want to do something relevant in the so-called third act of our lives."

Though she is best known for her long and successful career as a studio executive, Lansing also spent four years after college teaching high school English and math at public schools throughout the Los Angeles area. This experience, coupled with Lansing's long-held belief in the power of education to create lasting social change, has helped secure the place of education on the Foundation's slate of projects.

Lansing sits on the boards of The Carter Center, Teach for America, and The American Association for Cancer Research. Additionally, she is a Regent of the University of California and serves as chair of the University Health Services Committee. Lansing also serves on Governor Schwarzenegger's Committee on Education Excellence as well as the California State Superintendent of Education's P-16 Advisory Council.  Lansing graduated cum laude with a Bachelor of Science Degree from Northwestern University in 1966.


Ted Mitchell, CEO - NewSchools Venture Fund

Ted Mitchell assumed the role of CEO of NewSchools Venture Fund in the fall of 2005 after having served on the NewSchools Board of Directors for seven years.

Prior to joining NewSchools, Mitchell served as the 12th president of Occidental College in Los Angeles. Mitchell’s tenure at Occidental was marked by a dramatic improvement in both the College’s national reputation and its engagement in the community, as well as by unprecedented financial growth. A former deputy to the president at Stanford and vice chancellor at UCLA, Mitchell is a national leader in the effort to provide high-quality education for all students and has long been active in California and Los Angeles educational reform initiatives. He currently chairs the Governor’s Committee on Educational Excellence, charged with making recommendations to improve California’s system of K-12 finance and governance, and is President of the California State Board of Education.  He also serves on the boards of a variety of nonprofit education organizations.

Ted graduated from Stanford with bachelor’s degrees in economics and history, and also earned a master's degree in history and a doctorate in education there.

Barry Munitz, Chair - California P-16 Council, Trustee Professor - CSU Los Angeles

Barry Munitz (California) served as president and chief executive officer of the J. Paul Getty Trust from 1998 to 2006 and as chancellor of the California State University system from 1991 to 1999. He was head of the University of Houston, Central Campus, from 1977 until he left in 1982 to become a senior executive at a large corporation in Houston. Munitz has been a national leader in promoting educational excellence at all levels, including on the Princeton Board of Trustees. He chairs the California P-16 Council and was chair of the American Council on Education , as well as the California Education Round Table.  He is a director of Sallie Mae and was a member of the Commission on National Investment in Higher Education and the White House Council's America Reads Challenge.

 

Caprice Young, Ed.D - Vice President for Education, Laura and John Arnold Foundation

For over two decades, Caprice has been at the forefront of education reform, inside and outside the system.  She served as the reform president of the Los Angeles Unified School District Board during a time of intense struggle over the future of the city's schools, and, along with Superintendent Roy Romer, was instrumental in making gains across the district in student achievement and launching an ambitious program of school facilities renewal that continues today.  Following her service to Los Angeles, Caprice founded the California Charter Schools Association, uniting three state and regional charter groups, and grew it to become the nation's most powerful state association, accelerating the growth of charter schools, encouraging and supporting diverse leadership in the movement, and advocating strongly on behalf of charters and choice. Sensing the transformative power of technology in education, Caprice then took on the post of CEO of KC Distance Learning and Vice President of Business Development and Alliances for Knowledge Universe Education (KUE) U.S. Most recently, Caprice took on the job of rescuing the financially troubled Inner City Education Foundation (ICEF) and its portfolio of fifteen high-performing LA Charter schools. Through all of these experiences, Caprice has kept her eye firmly on the goal of transforming public education so that it serves all children well. Caprice is now the Vice President for Education at the Laura and John Arnold Foundation.