Edelman was a key organizer of Stand for Children Day, a June 1, 1996 rally at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., attended by 300,000 people. Among the speakers at this rally, the largest for children in U.S. history, were
Geoffrey Canada, who later became Stand for Children’s first board of directors chair, the editor of Parade Magazine,
Walter Anderson, who came up with the name "Stand for Children Day," and
Marian Wright Edelman. On June 2, 1996, Edelman and Eliza Leighton founded Stand for Children as an ongoing advocacy organization to support rally participants when they returned home. Hundreds of follow up Stand for Children events and rallies took place across the country on June 1, 1997, and then June 1, 1998. Stand for Children's mission is to ensure all students receive a high quality, relevant education, especially those whose boundless potential is overlooked or under-tapped because of their skin color, zip code, first language, or disability. Stand's top priority areas concern increasing high school graduation rates, college and career preparation, literacy proficiency levels of economically disadvantaged students, and achieving equitable and adequate funding. Since its founding in 1996, Stand has achieved numerous legislative victories for students and created programs aimed at boosting academic success. Stand helped secure the passage and full funding of
Measure 98 in Oregon, which provides $303 million to enable the state's school districts to expand evidence-based dropout prevention strategies, career technical education pathways, college credit courses, and post-secondary counseling. In Washington, Stand helped pass the nation's first-ever statewide Advanced Placement course enrollment equity requirement. Stand also played a pivotal role in advocating for the passage of funding for full-day kindergarten in Colorado in 2019. In 2017, Stand developed the Center for High School Success, which partners with high schools and districts across the country to significantly increase 9th Grade On-Track Rates, reduce chronic absenteeism, improve attendance, and strengthen Career Technical Education and Dual Credit pathways. In 2022, preeminent early literacy expert Dr. Nell Duke joined Stand for Children to create the Center for Early Literacy and Learning Success. In 2024, after eight years of development and piloting, Dr. Duke and a world-class, diverse team of researchers finished the pathbreaking Great First Eight curriculum, the first-ever comprehensive curriculum for children from age 0-8. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Edelman leadership catalyzed
Project 100, a groundbreaking initiative with Propel and GiveDirectly that raised and efficiently distributed $195 million to nearly 200,000 families in need. ==Past controversy==