Tag Archive: college


What We’re Reading

What We’re Reading is a weekly series on Beyond the Classroom that highlights recent news and research that informs Communities In Schools’ work to help students succeed.

nancy essary making lunch for students

Communities In Schools of East Texas Site Coordinator Nancy Essary collaborates with a local church to make sure students are fed during long school breaks.

NPR: A growing number of children across the United States rely on free or reduced-priced lunches from schools for healthy meals. But what happens when school is out for the holidays? How do students eat? NPR’s “All Things Considered” explores how local organizations help close the gap when it comes to free meals for students, so no one goes hungry.

Huffington Post: The Great Recession of 2008 was a tough time to graduate from college. The job market was in a severe downturn, and recent grads found themselves struggling to find substantial work, pay off their loans, and strike out on their own. But according to a recent study by the Pew Economic Mobility Project, while many young adults were faced with uncertain futures after receiving their bachelor’s degrees, it was worse for young people who didn’t have degrees at all. Results from the study showed that the unemployment rate for people in their early 20s with college degrees was lower than that of people in the same age range who only had a high school education, even for low-wage jobs like waiting tables and working in retail.

Meet Our Leadership: Shelley Henderson

Shelley Henderson“I feel like everything I’ve done has led me to Communities In Schools,” said Shelley Henderson, state director of Communities In Schools of Nebraska and interim executive director of Communities In Schools of Omaha.

Born and raised in Omaha, Henderson had a childhood very similar to the kind that Communities In Schools students across the country experience every day. Her mother, who was a teenager when she had Henderson, struggled with poverty and mental illness.

“Her ability to engage with schools and advocate for what I needed…she couldn’t do it,” Henderson said. “I grew up in the midst of gang culture and food pantries, but I loved school. It was well lit. I was guaranteed light and water, and I could eat there. I could read there. And I figured out that opening a book could transport me to anywhere in the universe. I knew that school had to be a priority for me, and that it was going to allow me to turn my situation around.”

Upon graduating from high school, Henderson knew she wanted to help young people struggling to overcome the same barriers to success she once faced. After college, she became a teacher in the Omaha public school system, and worked hard to provide her students with both a quality education and the resources they and their families needed to survive. But doing both was exhausting, and after seven years she felt burned out.

Henderson felt torn between teaching children and supporting them, and so took a job with the University of Nebraska in Omaha as a P-16 coordinator. P-16 is a comprehensive system dedicated to linking all levels of education, from preschool to post-secondary. As a coordinator, Henderson helped the local school district and the University of Nebraska align their curricula, so that students graduating high school had a smooth academic transition into college. She also organized campus tours for students, so they could get a glimpse of post-secondary education and begin to imagine themselves with a college degree.

Henderson found the work fulfilling, but knew that she could still do more to help students succeed. It was 2008, and the youth in north Omaha were truly struggling. There were robberies and drive-by shootings, teen pregnancies and academic failures. And the community had had enough. They banded together to look for solutions when Henderson stumbled upon the Communities In Schools website. She quickly learned more about the organization, and felt it made the most sense to bring the organization’s passion for building a community of support around students to the youth of north Omaha. With the support of the Communities In Schools national office and her community, Henderson was able to build the Nebraska state office. They began serving students during the 2010-2011 school year, with Henderson at the helm as state director.

“With Communities In Schools I’ve been given license to consider ‘whatever it takes’ to usher resources into schools. It’s been the one opportunity in my professional career where I’ve been allowed to dedicate 100 percent to figuring out what it’s going to take to get kids and families to the next level. It’s been liberating.”

What We’re Reading

Cupcake Diaries cover

"The Cupcake Diaries" is one series The New York Times highlights for its inclusion of a Hispanic character.

New York Times: While Hispanic children make up nearly a quarter of the United States’ public school population, they’re having trouble finding likenesses of themselves in reading materials in classrooms and libraries. Many of today’s popular book titles feature main characters who are white. And according to numerous education experts, this results in Hispanic students feeling unable to connect with and get invested in the stories they’re reading.

“Kids do have a different kind of connection when they see a character who looks like them or they experience a plot or a theme that relates to something they’ve experienced in their lives,” said Jane Fleming, an assistant professor at the Erikson Institute, a graduate school in early childhood development in Chicago.

In response, publishers are beginning to promote titles that more accurately reflect today’s classroom demographics. For instance, Simon & Schuster is rolling out a series for girls with a Hispanic protagonist. And Houghton Mifflin allocates a specific percentage of its published content to feature Hispanic characters.

UNICEF: Making education accessible to all, regardless of economic status, is truly an international issue. In 2010, the global population of those between the ages of 15 and 24 reached one billion, and according to Pauline Rose, director of the Education for All Global Monitoring Report, many of these young people are not learning the skills necessary to succeed as adults. In an enlightening podcast with UNICEF, Rose discusses what needs to be done by both local communities and national governments to help children get the education they need to attain viable careers.

Across the United States, Communities In Schools focuses on preparing young people  for life after high school graduation. Our site coordinators take students on college visits, help students with college and financial aid applications, and provide career-building opportunities such as visits to professional offices, internships, and job shadowing experiences.

Huffington Post: A new report from the Annie E. Casey Foundation revealed that nearly 6.5 million teenagers and young adults in the United States are neither in school nor working. According to the “Kids Count” report, the number of unemployed youth in the country has reached its highest level since World War II.  And these young people are not only having trouble finding viable careers — they’re   having trouble finding entry-level jobs in places such as restaurants and grocery stores, where they can learn ground-level professional skills necessary to succeed in the adult workforce.

As these young people continue to face barriers due to economic status and lack of education, the nation is at risk of facing a huge boom in chronic unemployment.

“All young people need opportunities to gain work experience and build the skills that are essential to being successful as an adult,” Patrick McCarthy, president and CEO of the Annie E. Casey Foundation, said in a statement. “Ensuring youth are prepared for the high-skilled jobs available in today’s economy must be a national priority, for the sake of their future roles as citizens and parents, the future of our workforce and the strength of our nation as a whole.”

Making College Dreams Come True

Karina Chavarria with Gabriela, an undocumented senior and the first president of the High School Dreamers Club at Hamilton. She is applying to multiple colleges and universities. Photo courtesy Deborah Marcus.

It started with two students, seniors at Hamilton High School in Los Angeles, Calif., who had the American dream like so many others to get a college education. Only these students were undocumented immigrants – they were brought by their parents to the U.S. as children, but never granted legal citizenship. And while they have been guaranteed access to K-12 education through the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in Plyer v. Doe, without a social security number, they could only apply for college as non-U.S. citizens. That meant paying hefty tuition fees since they were ineligible for state or federal financial aid. Their dreams were dangerously close to becoming faded memories.

Then they heard the story of Karina Chavarria, a Communities In Schools of Los Angeles graduation coach at Hamilton, who herself had been undocumented but had gone on to obtain both her undergraduate and master’s degrees. And suddenly, the vision of becoming a college student came into sharper focus.

“I tell them my story – who I am, what I’ve been through and how I got here,” said Chavarria, who was 25 before she was granted citizenship. She knows the psychological toll that comes with being silent about being undocumented, and of waiting and wanting, because she has lived through it.

“They don’t say anything while they’re listening but you can see that they understand I know exactly what they are facing. When I stop talking they come up to me and say, ‘Can you help me get into college?’”

An estimated 65,000 undocumented young people graduate from high school each year according to a 2012 report by the Immigration Policy Center. Yet, approximately only five to ten percent of these students make the transition to college Within the Los Angeles Unified School District there are reportedly 200,000 undocumented students.

The Dream Act, federal legislation originally proposed in 2001, if passed would allow qualifying undocumented youth to be eligible for a conditional path to citizenship by meeting specific criteria and completing a college degree. Similar versions of the legislation at the state and local level now allow undocumented students to pay in-state tuition, and other legislation has passed that grants individuals access to state funding that can help with financial aid. These steps have helped low-income families afford to send their kids to college.

Helping students succeed in school and stay on track to graduation is something Chavarria deals with every day. In her part-time job at Hamilton, she provides approximately 70 students with targeted services while also pursuing her doctorate degree at UCLA. But Chavarria has made it her central focus to work on an issue that is very close to her heart – giving hope to undocumented youth by providing them with the information and resources they need to become college students.

“This is a passion of mine,” said Chavarria, who’s worked with high school students for more than a decade and at Hamilton since 2011. “Nothing will stop me from doing my work with the students.”

After the first two students, two more approached her. Then there were 11, and by year’s end, Chavarria had guided nearly 20 students to resources that helped them find funding to pay application fees, apply for financial aid and complete paperwork so that they could become college students.

Chavarria knew that she could be exponentially more effective and have a greater reach if she enrolled others in her mission. She found students at Hamilton who were willing to support their peers and helped them launch the High School Dreamers club at the start of the 2012 school year. The club’s goals are to make sure students feel safe enough to reveal they are undocumented and then to create a plan that will get them into college. Chavarria acts as the facilitator – she keeps the students updated on immigration legislation, helps arrange for speakers to come meet with the club and attends their weekly meetings when she is not in class herself. The students are meeting leaders in their community, learning presentation and planning skills, and gaining the confidence to stand up for themselves. Because of Chavarria, these students are helping themselves while giving back to their own communities.

“I would do this work even if I didn’t get paid,” said Chavarria. “This is an investment. To see these kids walk across the stage and achieve their academic goals…it’s so gratifying. I know that I’ve impacted the life of not only one person, but the whole community.”

What We’re Reading

Chronicle of Philanthropy: We made it through the crowded shopping aisles and parking lots on Black Friday. We refreshed many an overloaded online store on Cyber Monday. And on Tuesday, rather than rushing to buy things, we gave. The first Giving Tuesday kicked off this past week, and people were encouraged to take a break from their holiday shopping to donate to their favorite nonprofits. The amount of online donations processed by Blackbaud, a processor of online gifts, shot up 53 percent to a whopping $10 million on Tuesday, compared with the same day last year, before the inception of Giving Tuesday.

Did you make a donation on Giving Tuesday? Let us know in the comments!

Education Week: On Monday, the Department of Education released high school graduation rates from the 2010-2011 school year that for the first time reflect a common method of calculation for all states. The new method of calculation requires states to track individual students and report how many first-time ninth graders graduate within four years.

State-by-state data, available on Education Week’s website, reflects large achievement gaps. While 88 percent of eligible students graduated last year in Iowa, only 56 percent graduated in Washington, D.C. Across the country, Communities In Schools’ local affiliates are committed to closing the achievement gap and making sure that students have the resources they need to graduate and succeed.

Huffington Post: One thing holding many students back from pursuing a post-secondary education is the cost. College can put students back thousands of dollars, and with the current state of the economy, many are afraid they won’t be able to earn enough after graduation to pay off their loans.

On Tuesday, Florida Governor Rick Scott challenged colleges across the state to provide bachelor’s degrees at a fraction of the current cost – $10,000, to be precise.

“Today, I’m issuing a challenge to our state colleges to help improve the value of higher education for Florida families by improving affordability and results,” Scott said. “I’m issuing a challenge … to find innovative ways to offer a bachelor’s degree at a cost of just $10,000 to Florida families that will provide graduates with a great opportunity for employment.”

St. Petersburg College is the first school to step up to the challenge. President Bill Law is currently looking into making the school’s Technology Management and Development program available to students for $10,000.