Chance The Rapper Is Creating An Award Show For Educators

Chance the Rapper attends the 88th Annual Bud Billiken Parade on Aug. 12 in Chicago. (Photo: Daniel Boczarski via Getty Images)
Chance the Rapper attends the 88th Annual Bud Billiken Parade on Aug. 12 in Chicago. (Photo: Daniel Boczarski via Getty Images)

Chance the Rapper wants to give educators the recognition they rightfully deserve.

The Chicago rapper is organizing the inaugural Twilight Awards, set to be held in June 2018. The ceremony, hosted by James Corden, will celebrate “teachers, parents, principals and students that convey leadership,” Chance said in his announcement Friday. The show will be held in his hometown and will feature guest performances.

He announced news of the show at the very end of a summit for his charity SocialWorks, during which he pledged a $2.2 million donation to 20 Chicago public schools. The summit was a Steve Jobs-inspired event where Chance gave an update on the nonprofit’s progress since he launched it a year ago.

“Every contribution … brings this city and this nation closer to providing a well-rounded quality education for each and every child,” he said at the event. “Funding quality education for public [school] students is the most important investment a community can make.”

Chance, who also grilled chicken at Nando’s Peri-Peri for charity this week, is on a mission to make a positive impact on Chicago. In the past, the rapper has advocated for better opportunities for the city by meeting with the state governor, donated money and supplies to students, donated outerwear to the homeless and led a march to voting polls. The 24-year-old was honored by former First Lady Michelle Obama when he received BET’s Humanitarian Award in June.

Hear his full remarks from the SocialWorks summit in the video below.

H/T Pitchfork

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This article originally appeared on HuffPost.