young elected officials network 2012 national convening local and municipal officials

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Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials Reuben Jacobson, Senior Associate for Research and Strategy, Coalition for Community Schools at the Institute for Educational Leadership June 22, 2012

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Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials. Reuben Jacobson, Senior Associate for Research and Strategy, Coalition for Community Schools at the Institute for Educational Leadership. June 22, 2012. Who Are We?. Institute for Educational Leadership - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials

Young Elected Officials Network

2012 National Convening Local and Municipal OfficialsReuben Jacobson, Senior Associate for Research and Strategy, Coalition for Community Schools at the Institute for Educational Leadership

June 22, 2012

Page 2: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials

Institute for Educational Leadership Working in education since1964 Center for Leadership and Policy Center for Workforce Development Center for Family, School and Community

Who Are We?

2

www.iel.org www.communityschools.org

www.ncwd-youth.info www.ramp.iel.org

www.ncld-youth.info http://epfp.iel.org

Page 3: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials

Uniquely positioned to convene national, state, and local partners across sectors

Over 170 partners including the United Way Worldwide, AFT, NEA, AASA, America’s Promise, Promise Neighborhood Institute, YMCA, BBBS, NASBHC, APHA, higher ed., & others

Support and convene practitioners on the ground, across the country

Who is the Coalition for Community Schools?

www.communityschools.org 3

Page 4: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials

50 community school systems; thousands of community schools

Encouraged by Secretary Duncan’s support and his work in Chicago

1,400 participants at 2012 Community Schools National Forum

Increased attention due to necessity: leverage existing resources in challenging economy (EdWeek cover story)

Growing number of place-based initiatives

State of the Community School Movement

www.communityschools.org 4

Page 5: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials

Federal◦ Elementary and Secondary Act (ESEA) Waivers◦ School Improvement Grants◦ Race to the Top (district-level awards coming

soon)◦ Focus on neighborhoods and communities (place-

based)◦ ESEA is going nowhere

State/Local◦ Budget shortfalls in all areas: education, health,

etc.◦ Education legislation to line up for federal grants◦ Common Core Standards

Educational Landscape

www.communityschools.org 5

Page 6: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials

Non-academic factors matter to our children’s success◦ Health, mental health, early childhood

opportunities, nutrition, social/emotional◦ 2/3 of achievement is attributable to non-school

factors (Rothstein, 2010)◦ Needs are growing (MetLife survey)

Challenges on the Ground

www.communityschools.org 6

Page 7: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials

Teachers under attack◦ Job satisfaction decreasing (MetLife)

Narrowing curriculum disengaged students

Early chronic absence (10 days or more) Early childhood: eligibility challenges;

decrease in funding Access to services

Challenges on the Ground (cont.)

www.communityschools.org 7

Page 8: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials

Manifestos of 2008◦ Education Equality Project◦ Broader Bolder Approach◦ Community Agenda for America’s Public Schools◦ Essentially: In-school v. out-of-school

Centralized v. decentralized◦ School/community ↭ district◦ District ↭ state◦ State ↭ federal◦ Mayor ↭ school boards

Education “Battles”

www.communityschools.org 8

Page 9: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials

Competition v. equity

Silver bullet v. comprehensive

Public v. privatization (and the role of foundations)

Data v. common sense

Collaborative overload

Education “Battles” (cont.)

www.communityschools.org 9

Page 10: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials

The Challenge: Creating the Conditions for Learning

www.communityschools.org 10

•Early childhood development opportunities•Core instructional program, qualified teachers•Students are motivated and engaged in learning•Expanded learning opportunities•The basic physical, mental, and emotional health needs met

•Parental engagement and collaboration•A school climate that is safe, supportive, and respectful; connects students to a broader learning community

Page 11: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials

The Community School Solution

www.communityschools.org 11

Page 12: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials
Page 13: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials
Page 14: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials

A place and a set of partnerships connecting school, family, and community

Distinguished by an integrated focus on academics, early childhood, youth development, family engagement, health and social services, and community development

Curriculum emphasizes real-world learning Expanded learning opportunities Uniquely equipped to develop its students into

educated citizens ready and able to give back to their communities.

What is a Community School?

www.communityschools.org 14

Page 15: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials

Shared vision and accountability for results

Strong partnerships High expectations for all Community strengths Respect for diversity Local decision making

Community School Core Principles

www.communityschools.org 15

Page 16: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials

THEORY OF ACTION: A Scaled-Up System of Community Schools

www.communityschools.org 16

Page 17: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials

Community-Wide Leadership

www.communityschools.org 17

Page 18: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials

Increased Achievement: High-implementing Tulsa community schools outperform non-community schools in math by 32 points and reading by 19 points

Increased Graduation: Oyler Community Learning Center in Cincinnati has graduated more students in past 3 years than previous 85

Ready for school: Students participating in Judy Centers (MD community schools) had higher readiness scores than comparison

Quality Instruction: Increase in student enrollment in Honors and/or AP courses - 20% to 33.3% at Glencliff High School; Increase in graduation rate - 66.4% to 81.2% (Nashville, TN)

Select Results

www.communityschools.org 18

Page 19: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials

School Board◦ Cincinnati, OH Policy

7500◦ Hartford, CT◦ Seattle, WA◦ Oakland, CA

City Council◦ Washington, DC

Intergovernmental Agreements◦ SUN Community

Schools Multnomah County, OR (Portland)

State: IL, CT, CSBA Federal

◦ ESEA◦ RTT Districts◦ SIG◦ Promise

Neighborhood/FSCS

Supportive Policies

www.communityschools.org 19

Page 20: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials

Community Schools Blend Funding and Leverage District Funds 3:1

www.communityschools.org 20

Education Title I; School Improvement Grants; IDEA; Title II—Professional Development; Title III—English Language Learner; Title IV—Safe and Drug Free; 21st Century Community Learning

Centers; Carol M. White Physical Education Grant; Safe School/Healthy Students; McKinney Vento Homeless Grant; Full-Service Community Schools Promise Neighborhoods

Housing and Urban Development Choice Neighborhoods

Corporation for National Service AmeriCorps

Juvenile Justice ProgramsUSDA Nutrition ProgramsHealth and Human Services

Head Start; Centers for Disease Control; Grant to Reduce Alcohol Abuse; HRSA Medicaid Substance Abuse and Mental Health

Services Administration (SAMHSA) Etc. Etc. Etc.

Page 21: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials

Think systemically, not just programmatically

Community engagement: Convene innovators

◦ Take a leadership role, organize community mtgs.◦ Identify community needs (e.g., DC Voice)

Constituent services Positioned to bust silos, across agencies

How can you help community schools flourish?

www.communityschools.org 21

Page 22: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials

Questions to ask…

www.communityschools.org 22

Results we want? Shared vision? Resources in our community?

◦ Financial, physical, human, political, organizational

Self-interest? Power? Politics?

How do you get this group together?

Page 23: Young Elected Officials Network 2012 National Convening Local and Municipal Officials

Contact Information

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Reuben [email protected](202) 822-8405 x131

www.iel.org www.communityschools.org

www.ncwd-youth.info www.ramp.iel.org

www.ncld-youth.info http://epfp.iel.org