Site icon Turkish Minute

NBA’s Kanter to open school in Oklahoma for under-served minority communities

Enes Kanter (R) on CNN.

Former Oklahoma City Thunder player Enes Kanter plans to open a charter school in the metro area that focuses on serving low-income minority students and those from immigrant families with limited English-speaking abilities, The Associated Press reported.

Kanter, who currently plays for the Boston Celtics, notified the Oklahoma City Public Schools of his intention to open the Enes Kanter School for Exceptional Learning, according to a letter first obtained by The Frontier.

He and a group of “civic-minded individuals” from the city will submit a charter school application to the school district on Tuesday, The Oklahoman reported. The Oklahoma City School Board will then consider the application in a vote.

Kanter and his associates have not selected a location for the school but noted that they want to pick a site where “the need is high,” according to the letter.

The school would be designed mostly for under-served minority and immigrant students from fourth through 12th grade.

Kanter played for the Thunder from 2014 to 2017 before he was traded to the New York Knicks.

“Despite playing for other teams, I continue to return to Oklahoma City to host my annual basketball summer camps and to support programs that serve the OKC children,” Kanter wrote. “Through my foundation, my philanthropic activities extend to all of the cities where I have played for: Utah, Portland, New York, and Boston.”

The school would offer a syllabus that highlights reading, writing, math and science skills with an emphasis on physical, emotional and mental health education. It would embed “rich sports and arts activities in students’ daily schedule.”

Kanter would not be the first NBA player to open a school. Los Angeles Lakers star LeBron James gained recognition for opening the I Promise School in his hometown of Akron, Ohio. James’ school opened in 2018 as an elementary school to serve at-risk children.

Liked it? Take a second to support Turkish Minute on Patreon!
Exit mobile version