archs’ slps partnership · 2019-01-29 · archs’ slps partnership: after school overview...

12

Upload: others

Post on 24-Mar-2020

4 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership · 2019-01-29 · ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership: After School Overview Through ARCHS’ funding, resources, and expertise, the After School for All Partnership
Page 2: ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership · 2019-01-29 · ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership: After School Overview Through ARCHS’ funding, resources, and expertise, the After School for All Partnership

ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership: After SchoolOverviewThrough ARCHS’ funding, resources, and expertise, the After School for All Partnership (ASAP) provided programming for nearly 2,000 students at 30 locations (including 23 locations serving SLPS) through 6 youth service organizations.

Activities Conducted (including SLPS schools)• 371,000 hot meals provided• 71,474activitiesoffered(academicsupport,social/life,health/recreation, character development, parent involvement)• Morethan300stafftrained• Promoted after school services at annual Back to School Fair• Provided summer programs at Centennial Christian Church, St. Francis Cabrini Academy, and Jennings School District

HighlightsDuring the 2017-18 school year, all 30 locations participated in an evaluation in which youth,parents,afterschoolsitedirectors,afterschoolstaff,schooladministrators,andcommunity partners completed surveys addressing their experiences with and opinions about the after school program. These surveys are based on the statewide evaluation system developed by the Missouri AfterSchool Network, the Missouri Department of ElementaryandSecondaryEducation,andUniversityofMissouri’sOfficeofSocialandEconomic Data Analysis (OSEDA).

Page 3: ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership · 2019-01-29 · ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership: After School Overview Through ARCHS’ funding, resources, and expertise, the After School for All Partnership

Youth Outcomes: The following youth outcomes were reported with seventy percent (70%) being set as the benchmark: • 79%ofyouthreportedamediumtohighlevelofreadingefficacy• 90%ofyouthreportedamediumtohighlevelofmathefficacy• 86% of youth reported a medium to high level of interest and engagement in STEM• 97% of youth reported a medium to high level of personal and social skills

Parent Outcomes: The outcome benchmark for each site was for 70% of parents to report a medium to high level on each outcome. • 100% of parents reported a medium to high level of youth outcomes (child’s social skills, communications skills, responsibility, planning, initiative, etc.)• 97% of parents reported a medium to high level of program quality• 76% of parents reported a medium to high level of family support

Financial Impact • $11.7 million • Funding provided by ARCHS from Missouri Department of Social Services, St. Louis Mental Health Board, and the Norman J. Stupp Foundation (Commerce Bank Trustee): $2,617,539• Value of resources provided by ASAP partners: $9,159,145 (includes 1,413 volunteer hours)

Page 4: ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership · 2019-01-29 · ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership: After School Overview Through ARCHS’ funding, resources, and expertise, the After School for All Partnership

23 SLPS Schools Served*

• Ashland

• Bryan Hill

• Buder

• Dunbar

• Farragut

• Froebel

• Herzog

• Hickey

• Hodgen

• Jefferson

• Laclede

• Lexington

• Mann

• Mason

• Meramec

• Mullanphy

• Nance

• Oak Hill

• Patrick Henry

• Peabody

• Sigel

• Woerner

• Woodward

Two additional ARCHS’ funded after school programs at Gene Slay’s Girls and Boys Club and Boys

and Girls Clubs of Greater St. Louis at Adam’s Park also provided services to SLPS students and

families.

Page 5: ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership · 2019-01-29 · ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership: After School Overview Through ARCHS’ funding, resources, and expertise, the After School for All Partnership

Six Year OverviewARCHS’partnershipwithUSDAandtheStateofMissourioffersalternatemethodstofeed low income children during the summer. Since 2012, eligible SLPS students and their families have been randomly selected via an USDA pilot program to receive additional funding for summer food via existing EBT cards. ARCHS presented results at a White House conference on child hunger in January 2016. The program was renewed in 2015 and expanded beyond SLPS to the Ferguson-Florissant School District.

Human Impact: 30,656Children/youth served in SLPS • 2012: 5,300 • 2013: 4,672 • 2014: (program suspended by USDA) • 2015: 5,500 • 2016: 5,848 • 2017: 4,562• 2018: 4,774

Financial Impact: $3,298,539Summer EBT funds spent by selected SLPS families • 2012: $804,531 • 2013: $660,829 • 2014: (program suspended by USDA) • 2015: $495,329 • 2016: $497,610 • 2017: $410,580• 2018: $429,660

Utilization Impact: 93% averageSummerEBTbenefitsusedbyselectedSLPSfamilies• 2012: 93% • 2013: 89% • 2014: (program suspended by USDA) • 2015: 94% • 2016: 95%• 2017: 94%• 2018: 94%

ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership: Summer Meals

Page 6: ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership · 2019-01-29 · ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership: After School Overview Through ARCHS’ funding, resources, and expertise, the After School for All Partnership

ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership: Vision HealthOverviewThrough ARCHS’ funding, resources, and expertise, Kids Vision for Life St. Louis (KVFL) providesschool-basedcomprehensivevisionhealthcaretoun/under-insuredstudents,consisting of screenings, exams, and prescription eyeglasses. During the 2017-18 school year, KVFL served 156 Title 1 schools in 17 school districts, including 43 schools in SLPS.

Activities Conducted (including SLPS schools)• 40,998 eye screenings (8,880 SLPS)• 4,447 exams conducted (981 SLPS)• 4,064 glasses prescribed (891 SLPS)• 3,108 volunteer hours donated

Highlights• KVFL participated in two SLPS hosted fairs outside of the school year calendar: - August 2nd, 2017 – conducted vision screenings, eye exams and prescribed glasses to the families during the student’s in transition fair - May 4th, 2018- conducted vision screenings, eye exams and prescribed glasses to the students enrolled in the SLPS during the Community Resource Fair• KVFL conducted trainings on August 8, 2017 for all 44 SLPS elementary school nurses about KVFL’s screening and exam programs, and provided necessary educational materials

Financial Impact• $572,971• Funding provided by ARCHS, Anthem, Crown Vision Center (MO HealthNet for Kids), Healthy Vision Association, Central Bank, Kendra Scott, Essilor or America and other organizational and private donors: $389,793• Value of other resources provided by Essilor Vision Foundation, University of Missouri-St. Louis College of Optometry, volunteers and other sources: $183,178

Page 7: ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership · 2019-01-29 · ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership: After School Overview Through ARCHS’ funding, resources, and expertise, the After School for All Partnership

43 SLPS Schools Served

• Adams• Ames VPA• Ashland• Bryan Hill• Buder• Carver• Clay• Columbia• Cole• Dewey IS• Dunbar• Farragut• Ford• Froebel• Gateway MST• Hamilton• Herzog CEC• Hickey• Hodgen• Humboldt• Jefferson• Kennard CJA• Laclede• Lexington• Lyon @ Blow• Mallinckrodt• Mann• Mason• Meramec• Monroe• Mullanphy ILC• Nance• Oak Hill• Patrick Henry

• Pamoja Prep Acad @ Cole• Peabody• Shaw VPA• Shenandoah• Sigel• Stix ECC• Walbridge• Washington Montessori• Wilkinson ECC• Woerner• Woodward

Page 8: ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership · 2019-01-29 · ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership: After School Overview Through ARCHS’ funding, resources, and expertise, the After School for All Partnership

ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership: Behavioral Health

OverviewThrough ARCHS’ funding, resources, and expertise Amanda Luckett Murphy Hopewell Center, Inc. (Hopewell) provides a comprehensive, holistic panel of behavioral services to support SLPS students, families, teachers, and administrators.

SLPS Schools Served• Ashland Elementary• Clay Elementary • Columbia Elementary• Lexington Elementary• Northwest Middle• Pierre Laclede Elementary

Activities Conducted Across SLPS• 817 students served • 158teachers/stafftrained• 104 parents trained,18 individual parents sessions held

Highlights of SLPS Participants Served• 100%oftrainedschoolstaffreportincreasedabilitytoassessbehaviorproblems and emotional disorders• 99% of parents served reported improved parenting skills related to disruptive behaviors• 97%oftheparticipatingteacher(s)/staffstronglyagreedtheylearnednew information about the topic(s) and 100% agreed they would apply what they learned to their lives• 100%ofteachers/staffreportsatisfactionintheirabilitytodeveloptreatment plansforstudentsassessedwithbehavioralproblemsand/oremotionaldisorders

Financial Impact• $231,046 - Funding provided by ARCHS from Missouri Department of Social Services: $164,406 - Value of resources provided by Hopewell: $66,640

Page 9: ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership · 2019-01-29 · ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership: After School Overview Through ARCHS’ funding, resources, and expertise, the After School for All Partnership

ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership: Digital Literacy

OverviewARCHS has awarded state-funded, no cost access into an IT e-learning system for Microsoft products to high school students in multiple school districts, including SLPS. This IT e-learning system is called “Microsoft Imagine Academy” (MIA). Beginning in the 2017-18 school year, area high schools received online curriculum and industry-recognizedcertificationsthatwillassiststudentsindevelopingdigitalskillsrangingfromfundamentaltechnologytopreparationforcareer/collegerolesincomputerscience.

In addition, ARCHS’ funding of MIA has enabled educators’ success by providing them professional development resources and train-the-trainer sessions needed to keep their technicalskillscurrent.WithoutARCHS’support,thehighcostofMicrosoftcertificationexams is often a barrier to students from low-income families, even if the high school can affordtopurchasethestudentcurriculumandeducatorresources/training.

Activities Conducted (including SLPS)• 5 school districts, including SLPS are engaged in the MIA program - Jennings School District - Normandy Schools Collaborative - St. Louis Public Schools - University City School District - Valley Park School District• ARCHS coordinates the volume license purchase agreement• ARCHS coordinates the necessary trainings on use of software and reporting

Page 10: ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership · 2019-01-29 · ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership: After School Overview Through ARCHS’ funding, resources, and expertise, the After School for All Partnership

HighlightsSLPS high schools served: • Carnahan• Cleveland• Gateway• McKinley• Roosevelt• Soldan• Sumner• Vashon

Certificationexamsavailableinthefollowingareas:• MicrosoftOfficeSpecialist• Microsoft Technology Associate (MTA)• MicrosoftCertifiedProfessional(MCP)

SLPS student MIA exams:• 1,502 completed

Test Results• 1,208 failed• 62 incomplete• 232 passed

Page 11: ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership · 2019-01-29 · ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership: After School Overview Through ARCHS’ funding, resources, and expertise, the After School for All Partnership

ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership: Integrated Social SupportOverviewFor the past two years, ARCHS has awarded state funding to Big Brothers Big Sisters of Eastern Missouri to implement ABCToday in multiple Eastern Missouri area school districts, including SLPS. ABCToday is a school-based early warning and response system that is nationally recognized by the American Association of State Colleges and Universities, Civic Enterprises, Johns Hopkins University, and U.S. Department of Education.

Using existing school data – attendance, behavior, and course performance in reading and math – the ABCToday partnership works with schools to identify students in need and creates a response plan to address the root causes and bring coordinated supports to the child and family.

Activities Conducted (including SLPS)• 7,659 students served in 19 schools for four school districts• Recruited and retained 168 community partners for ABCNetwork• 45% of youth were succeeding in all 4 areas including Attendance, Behavior and Course Performance in Reading and Math through 4th quarter of the 2017- 18 school year• 72% of students were succeeding in Attendance (missing less than 10 days during the 4th quarter of the 2017-18)• 87% of students were succeeding in Behavior (receiving less than 5 discipline referrals during the 4th quarter of the 2017-18 school year) • 70% of students were succeeding in Reading (receiving a C or better during the 4th quarter of the 2017-18 school year)• 74% of students were succeeding in Math (receiving a C or better during the 4th quarter of the 2017-18 school year)

HighlightsSLPS schools served:• Carnahan High School Langston Middle• JeffersonElementarySchool• Lyon @ Blow• Monroe Elementary School• Yeatman Middle School

Financial Impact• $860,480 - Funding provided by ARCHS from Missouri Department of Social Services: $530,000 - Value of resources provided by BBBS: $330,480

Page 12: ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership · 2019-01-29 · ARCHS’ SLPS Partnership: After School Overview Through ARCHS’ funding, resources, and expertise, the After School for All Partnership

www.stlarchs.org

#stlarchs