Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Academic Success for All: It Takes A Village

Do you know that almost one third of our country’s children don’t meet expected levels of academic achievement (Weiss et al. 2009)?   A disproportionate number are racial and ethnic minorities or are from low-income families and when these children reach adulthood they won’t have the skills necessary to succeed in our global economy (Weiss et al. 2009).
These are staggering figures and its incumbent on us, on our society, to correct this travesty.  Not only is it the right (moral) thing to do, it’s the correct economic decision. If children, all children, receive a good education, then they will have the knowledge and tools to become productive members of society.  They will work and pay taxes, versus being incarcerated or on public assistance.  In 2007, the report, The Economic Costs of Poverty: Subsequent Effects of Children Growing Up Poor noted that millions of Americans, including more than 8.5 million children, live in areas of concentrated poverty.  Do you know what the cost is of providing services needed by the poor?  Yearly, it’s approximately 500 billion dollars, nearly 4% of GDP (Holzer et al. 2007).  When we can bear the costs of supporting the poor, why not provide the educational services that enable our children to move out of poverty?
Given that our country currently fails to adequately educate almost a third of our children, and a disproportionate number are low-income or racial and ethnic minorities, a clear 21st century civil rights issue, is it reasonable or even possible for individual schools, working in isolation from their communities, to succeed? Are they equipped to understand, let alone meet, the diverse needs of underprivileged children and their families?  Placing un-realistic ambitious expectations on a system that is already stretched thin is surely a recipe for failure. 
Educational accountability is important.  No Child Left Behind brought the importance of accountability to the fore, but despite its intent to set a high bar for all students and to protect the most vulnerable, it’s inflexible accountability provisions have caused schools to focus inordinately on test scores, further hampering educational improvements (Duncan, 2013). 
Academic success for America’s children requires us - the Village, our overall society and our individual communities – civic leaders, corporate executives, higher education institutions, faith-based organizations, nonprofits, social service agencies, and individual citizens  - to take a stand and commit to investing in the solutions.   Communities across the United States, like many that are part of the National League of Cities, recognize the need for a systemic, holistic and collaborative approach to meeting the educational needs of children.  Research shows that community and family collaboration with schools result in increased academic achievement (Bryk 2010).  
Recently, congressmen Steny Hoyer, a Maryland democrat and Aaron Schock, an Illinois republican introduced the Full-Service Community Schools Act of 2014 (Hoyer et al. August 01, 2014). There are varying models of community schooling, but almost all use schools as a vehicle for meeting students’ academic, developmental, health and wellbeing needs.  Community schools integrate services into the school or provide a dedicated community connector (a full-time professional staff person) within the school to facilitate schools and students and their families accessing and benefiting from community resources. 
Community schools emphasize parental involvement at home, in the schools and within the community and utilize interagency collaboration, programming and partnership to identify and provide services.  This collaboration and partnership among schools, families and their communities crystalizes the importance of shared responsibility for obtaining the best educational outcomes for our children.  Hoyer and Schock recognize and acknowledge in their July 28, 2014 Education Week commentary, Congress’ role and responsibility “to ensure that our nation’s children have access to a quality education and the opportunities it brings.” 
They know Investments in community schools are investments in a competitive workforce.  One that will yield dividends of graduates that “start small businesses and launch new startups as the innovators and entrepreneurs of tomorrow.”  The next step is to continue securing bipartisan support for passage of the Full-Service Community Schools Act.   Passage of the act is feasible given the endorsement of educational leaders and associations like the American Federation of Teachers, the National Education Association, and the National Association of State Boards of Education.
Again, it’s incumbent on all of us to ensure our nation’s children have equitable access to a quality education.  It takes us, as the Village, demanding, funding and implementing systemic, evidenced-based and scalable programs like community schools.  As the authors of First Focus’ 2008 report, Big Ideas for Children: Investing in Our Nation’s Future say:
If we’re going to make a fundamental change in education, we have to declare
now and forever that failure is not an option and do it on the national level.
We can’t allow children to fall behind because they come from single parent
families, or neighborhoods that are struggling, or rural regions far from our
own. We can’t allow children to fall behind because they have the misfortune of
having parents who don’t care or who aren’t engaged.
For generations, our schools worked because as a society, we insisted on it. We

refused to accept failure. We can’t accept failure now.

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