Category: National Office


Daring to Dream: Graduating to a More Hopeful Future

HuffPo-logo2Dan_Cardinali hig resToday’s blog post is by Communities In Schools President Dan Cardinali, who writes regularly for The Huffington Post. In his latest post, Cardinali points out the disconnect between the euphoria over the record levels for the Dow or the S&P 500, and the impoverished youth who dare to dream of a brighter future. During a recent visit to Chaparral High School in Las Vegas, 2,500 miles away from Wall Street, Cardinali  was reminded that for some kids, even Main Street looks like a dream destination – and they don’t have the bus fare to get there.

 

Last week, as Wall Street shattered one record after another, all eyes turned to the future. How long, the commentators wondered, until the Dow hit 18,000, unemployment dropped below 7 percent, or housing values regained their 2006 highs? Good news begets good feelings, and suddenly it seemed okay to dream again.

Meanwhile, I was 2,500 miles away from Wall Street, listening to an entirely different kind of discussion about the future. At Chaparral High School in Las Vegas, about 20 seniors sat at their desks as a guest speaker from the Andson Foundation talked about life after graduation. “Follow your passion,” he urged the students as he related his own journey from Chaparral High to UNLV to a career in financial planning.

So, what exactly did these kids want to do when high school was over? Initially the question was met with shrugs and blank stares, but the speaker wasn’t about to let his listeners off the hook so easily. He pointed to each student individually and repeated his question until the answers began to trickle out. A girl in the front row wanted to be an actress. Just behind her was a boy who dreamed of opening a restaurant, while one of his friends hoped to become a tattoo artist.

The answers were halting and tentative, as if speaking an ambition out loud might somehow jinx its chance of success. For these seniors, “the future” was just days away, yet it seemed they had barely dared to imagine what it might look like or how it might be better than today.

Amid the euphoria of record levels for the Dow or the S&P 500, we occasionally hear from a commentator who points out the disconnect between Wall Street and Main Street, where the recovery looks more fragile and the future less certain. That’s certainly true, but my visit to Chaparral High School reminded me that for some kids, even Main Street looks like a dream destination — and they don’t have the bus fare to get there.

Far from the glittering lights of the Las Vegas Strip, Chaparral is surrounded by dingy motels that rent rooms by the week. With high unemployment driving a transient population, the school faces nearly a 50 percent turnover rate among its 2,200 students. Principal Dave Wilson managed to boost graduation rates by 15 percent last year — but starting from a baseline of just 34 percent, he still has one of the worst graduation rates in the entire state.

“We graduate fewer than 50 percent of our students, and that’s totally unacceptable,” he told me. “It’s totally unacceptable that half the kids who attend here wouldn’t even be eligible to come back and work as a custodian at this school.”

I was still thinking about that number a few minutes later as I listened to those 20 students discussing their future in the class sponsored by CIS Academy. Each time the speaker pressed for an answer about plans after graduation, it dawned on me that the question itself was a kind of victory. Here was a caring adult challenging them to think about the future — someone who assumed that they had a future and that their dreams mattered.

That’s what we mean at CIS when we say, “It’s relationships, not programs, that change children.” Surrounded with love and support and guidance, these forgotten students had discovered a reason to come back to school each day. Now, with graduation day just around the corner, they’ve already beaten the odds and set their sights, ever so tentatively, on life beyond high school.

For the Chaparral High School Class of 2013, the path ahead might not be clear — but it’s infinitely better than a dead end.

 

Follow Dan Cardinali on Twitter:

@DanCardinali

 

Investing In What Works

Today’s blog post is by Communities In Schools President Dan Cardinali, who writes regularly for The Huffington Post. In his latest blog post, which originally ran on March 14, he argues that it’s not enough to invest money and volunteer time in school turnaround efforts if they lack evidence of effectiveness. If we truly wish to help educators turn around the lowest performing schools in America and break the cycle of poverty for millions of young people, we must focus on what is proven to work – evidence-based and rigorously evaluated programs. Let us know what you think.

Under-Performing Schools: Stop Experimenting, Start Fixing

Imagine an army of nearly 2,000 volunteers hunkering down for a three-year battle focused on rescuing 60 of America’s worst-performing schools.

That’s the vision behind School Turnaround AmeriCorps, a $15 million effort funded by the Department of Education and the Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS). By matching up the muscle of AmeriCorps with the brains of education reformers, the School Turnaround program has the potential to make a real difference in the lives of countless disadvantaged students.

In announcing the program late last month, Wendy Spencer, the CEO of CNCS, was typically focused on national service as a solution to social problems, rather than an end in itself. “This partnership will expand the role of AmeriCorps members in helping students, teachers, parents and school administrators transform schools into models of achievement,” she said. “We welcome new ideas that will result in the same outcome: schools that are putting children on the pathway to success.”

There’s no doubt that teachers and administrators in failing schools will appreciate the extra backup provided by this new program. Lacking external supports, our poorest children come to school each day in search of food, shelter, counseling, medical care and as well as a host of academic needs. All of those things take time, leaving teachers chronically overworked and under-supported. This is something I hear over and over again in my visits to schools around the country: Every time we provide supports for struggling students, teachers and principals feel supported, too.

But as much as I want to welcome the human capital provided by School Turnaround AmeriCorps, I can’t help worrying about the human cost.

As it now stands, the new program is a grand experiment that inadvertently treats both students and volunteers as guinea pigs. Though the initial press releases tout “proven” techniques and “evidence-based” approaches, it turns out that program funding is not limited to organizations with a successful track record in dropout prevention, improved academic proficiency, school safety, family engagement and so forth. Instead, grant proposals are being solicited from any organization with the “promise of a strong theory” or a “well-specified conceptual framework.”

When you’re investing the time and effort of nearly 2,000 volunteers, I don’t believe that strong theories and conceptual frameworks are sufficient. Many AmeriCorps volunteers will be young people getting a first taste of national service, and their energy and idealism are resources that we can ill afford to squander. Give them an early sense of accomplishment, make them a part of something truly life changing and you cement their commitment to a lifetime of service. But ask them to waste their energies on an ill-conceived experiment with a vague measure of success, and you risk the early onset of soul-crushing cynicism.

As for the students, is it morally acceptable to risk their future on a theoretical framework when we already have effective interventions backed by strong evaluations and years of quality improvements?

To clarify the moral argument, imagine for a moment that your child was seriously ill: No parent with financial means would turn first to a risky medical experiment just because the treatment was free or low-cost. Rather, we’d seek out the most experienced, most successful doctors we could find in order to give our child the very best shot at a full and quick recovery. Why, then, is it acceptable to subject the poorest children in the lowest-performing schools to a $15 million series of educational experiments, when proven “treatments” are readily available?

I understand that innovation doesn’t happen without experimentation, and I’m a firm believer in new approaches for solving intractable problems. But smart experiments are generally small experiments, designed to limit the fallout of a potential failure. When the stakes are higher and the scope is wider, that’s the time to stick with what works.

Organizations like the Minnesota Reading Corps and others have spent years developing evidence based and rigorously evaluated programs that are ready today to use National Service volunteers to extend their impact. Their results are impressive and their data unimpeachable. For the sake of both the volunteers and the children they seek to help, we should demand that programs such as School Turnaround AmeriCorps focus on evidence rather than theories.

The noble purpose of focusing these resources on the worst-performing schools should give policymakers the justification to require that only the most effective interventions are deployed to support students and educators. This strategy will in turn enable educators to turnaround the lowest performing schools in America, thus breaking the cycle of poverty for millions of young people.

Follow Dan Cardinali on Twitter:

@DanCardinali

 

 

 

 

Finding the Courage to Fail

Manoj Saxena

Communities In Schools Board Member Manoj Saxena.

Last month, Communities In Schools welcomed Manoj Saxena, general manager of Watson Solutions at IBM, to its national board of directors. Saxena is responsible for the commercialization of Watson, one of the most sophisticated computers in the world.

Manoj Saxena is passionate about innovations in research and technology, and knows that finding success cannot come without accepting the risk of failure. Last year, he presented a TEDx talk in San Jose, Calif. about finding the “courage to fail.” TEDx is a spinoff of TED, a nonprofit devoted to “ideas worth spreading.” Presenters at TED and TEDx conferences have 18 minutes to share their knowledge and inspire others to change the world. But while the official TED conferences only happen twice a year, TEDx events happen regularly all over the world.

During his TEDx talk, Saxena discussed how people cannot achieve their goals without challenging themselves to do better, to take risks and to overcome their fears. “Everyone has the desire to succeed,” Saxena said. “But very few people have the courage to fail. If you really accept the notion of ‘it’s ok for me to fail,’ and go after it, then an incredible thing happens.”

Every day, students served by Communities In Schools overcome their fears, surmount difficult life circumstances and even come back from the brink of failure. Our dedicated site coordinators instill in students the idea that they are capable of great things, and the self-assurance to shape their own futures – regardless of what has happened in the past, be it a failed class, a school suspension or even time in jail. With that knowledge and confidence, students begin to blossom and transform their lives.

Watch Manoj Saxena’s TEDx talk below and tell us: What failures have you overcome? What did you learn from the experience?

Innovations in Mentoring

Today’s blog post is by Communities In Schools Associate Director of Federal Grants and Initiatives, Megan Robinson.

Communities In Schools staff at national mentoring summit

Left to right: Danya Perry of Communities In Schools of North Carolina, Lori Fickling of Communities In Schools of North Texas, Jade Parker of Communities In Schools of New Orleans, Megan Robinson of Communities In Schools national office, LaShawn Johnson of the national office, and LaTousha Daniels of Communities In Schools of Miami.

As we wrap up National Mentoring Month, I hope you’ve taken time to thank someone who has helped mentor you, or offered your own time to mentor someone who could use extra support or guidance. Mentoring can have a significant impact on young people’s determination and drive to stay in school. This message resonated for me during MENTOR’s National Mentoring Summit held in Washington, D.C. January 24-25. Nearly 650 leaders from youth-serving organizations, government, research and business came together to share innovative program models and research findings to connect young people with mentors so they can stay on the path to successful adulthood.

The Communities In Schools national office was invited to participate in the Summit as a presenter for the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention’s (OJJDP) Multi-State Mentoring Initiative. OJJDP awarded Communities In Schools a $2.5 million grant during the Fall of 2011 and we currently have 10 affiliates partnering on the project. Several affiliates, including our technical assistance provider Communities In Schools of North Carolina, joined me at the Summit last week. I was excited to present the accomplishments of our OJJDP affiliates, alongside Communities In Schools of Cape Fear, who presented a unique peer mentoring program that’s being supported by the OJJDP grant.

Our OJJDP partnering affiliates have made over 900 mentoring matches under the grant and we hope to demonstrate to the country how the Communities In Schools model strengthens mentoring relationships and leads to deeper connections between students and their mentors. When Communities In Schools site coordinators provide case management that includes things like parental engagement activities and ensuring basic needs like nutrition and medical care are met, mentors can focus on what they do best – being trusted friends, confidantes and champions to our students.

The OJJDP grant is allowing affiliates to build and expand innovative program designs including school-to-work initiatives for high school students, transition programs for adjudicated youth, and STEM projects with middle school and university students. The MENTOR Summit provided an engaging platform for us to share our efforts and learn from other programs around the country.

Thank you to our OJJDP partnering affiliates for recruiting and training hundreds of dedicated mentors and for building creative mentoring programs that are helping students reach their goals.

Honoring Our Unsung Heroes

Steven Weeks

Unsung Hero Award recipient Steven Weeks, a site coordinator from Communities In Schools of Greenville, South Carolina.

This past Thursday, I shook the hands of heroes.

Since 2007, Communities In Schools has recognized site coordinators who demonstrate an unwavering commitment to students most in need of integrated services with the Unsung Heroes Award. And last Thursday, the 2012 award recipients came to Arlington, Va., to be honored at our Leadership Town Hall. These five site coordinators represented affiliates from across the nation, from rural Washington to the tough streets of Chicago. More importantly, they represented the 4,900 full-time staff and nearly 50,000 volunteers who work tirelessly each day to ensure that the 1.26 million students they serve get the necessary resources to stay in school and achieve in life.

Meeting this year’s Unsung Heroes was an honor. What many of us consider to be amazing feats of strength and power – working around the clock to get children everything from food to academic support to translation services, is just another day in the life for them. They may not wear capes or fly, but these site coordinators are true heroes to the children and the families they serve.

Learn more about this year’s Unsung Heroes Award recipients on our website, and please join me in congratulating them on this wonderful honor!