Tag Archive: hunger


What We’re Reading

empty desks at national mall

Nonprofit organization College Board placed 857 desks on the National Mall to bring attention to the dropout crisis. Photo courtesy Alex Wong/Getty Images.

New York Times: While it’s a huge, positive milestone when a family is able to leave a homeless shelter and move into a house of their own, it’s rarely the end of the journey. The next big step is making the house a home, which means being able to afford furniture and appliances. While there are many organizations dedicated to helping families transition out of shelters, one new nonprofit in Detroit, Humble Design, is dedicated to helping families find everything they need for the next step, from beds and dressers, to silverware and wall art. Since 2009, Humble Design has used donated and discarded furniture to outfit more than 100 homes for transitioning families.

Many Communities In Schools students are homeless, moving between different shelters and other temporary residences over the course of their childhood. One of the most important things a student needs to succeed in school is a safe, stable place to call “home.” Organizations like Humble Design are helping to meet that need by transforming houses into comfortable and welcoming spaces.

9 News Now: Even though Washington, D.C. is in the midst of a heat wave this week, it certainly isn’t deterring thousands of tourists from visiting the National Mall. Anyone who braved the heat and took a walk to the Washington Monument on Thursday was greeted with 857 empty school desks, representing the students who drop out every hour of every school day.

The display was organized by the nonprofit organization College Board, and is intended to call upon leaders—including this year’s presidential candidates—to make education reform a prominent issue in their campaigns.

Students who drop out are more likely to live in poverty, earn thousands less over a working lifetime, suffer poor health, be dependent on public assistance or enter the criminal justice system. Read our fact sheet on the dropout crisis to learn more about the social and economic impact of dropping out of school.

CBS: On Wednesday, the nation’s largest physician’s group announced that they support having as a requirement yearly instruction aimed at educating students about obesity. The American Medical Association (AMA) agreed to back legislation that would require students at all levels of public schools be taught about the causes, consequences and prevention of obesity.

For students living in poverty, eating healthy food is not always an option. Many urban neighborhoods across the United States lack proper grocery stores, leaving parents unable to purchase fresh produce for their families. In addition, healthier foods tend to be more expensive. Families trying to feed themselves with food stamps are unable to afford healthy food without making financial sacrifices elsewhere.

Communities In Schools knows that every child needs healthy food in order to focus in class and learn. Across our network, our site coordinators make sure that every child gets the meals they need. They also organize numerous activities that students can participate in to exercise, stay in shape and have fun.

Hunger Hits Home

Hunger Hits Home logoWhen we think about people who don’t have enough to eat, developing nations come to mind, or cities and towns distant from our own neighborhoods. But people are going hungry on Main Street every day, in every neighborhood in America.

According to national nonprofit Share Our Strength, more than 16 million children across our nation live in households that struggle to put food on the table. That’s one in five children. Congressman Jim McGovern (D-Mass.) put it best: “We’re the United States of America, richest country on the planet, and there’s not a single community that’s hunger-free.”

On Saturday evening, the Food Network aired an eye-opening special about childhood hunger called Hunger Hits Home. The one-hour television program brought America’s hunger crisis right into people’s living rooms and showed that while we don’t necessarily see hungry people on the street every day, they are in our midst due to the economic downturn, health and financial setbacks, and other issues that anyone in America could face.

Hunger Hits Home profiled three families working hard just to stay afloat. In particular, the Walker family in Norfolk, Va., saw a direct correlation between a lack of food and academic success.

Icarus Walker struggled in class while dealing with hunger at home. Screengrab courtesy Food Network.

“I’ve always been an A student, but when I got to middle school it kind of fell off,” 16-year-old Icarus Walker said. After Icarus’ mother lost her job as a bus driver and his father was laid off and had to take a low-paying job, the young student and his three siblings were forced to survive on a diet that consisted entirely of ramen noodles.

“Having that fear, wondering what we’re going to eat tonight…I can see it in my report cards,” said Icarus.

Communities In Schools understands the connection between food and accomplishment. When a student doesn’t know what, or when, his or her next meal will be, that young person absolutely cannot focus on school, extracurricular activities or the future.

Across the country, Communities In Schools is working to make sure that students and their families at risk of going hungry have enough to eat. From food backpack programs, where we give students enough nutritious food to get them through weekends, to site coordinators hand-delivering meals to students’ homes during  summer break, our staff and volunteers are dedicated to making sure children’s bodies are nourished so they can focus on nourishing their minds.

Hunger Hits Home made it clear that America’s hunger crisis is occurring in every neighborhood in the United States. And they also make it clear that when everyone contributes to making a difference, we can stop hunger in its tracks and give every child a healthy, happy future.

Watch the full special:

Part of the Solution

Today’s blog post is from Brenda Kittles, Development Operations Coordinator for Foundation and Corporation Relations.  

Over the past few months, I have read dozens of articles focusing on education reform and teacher quality. I’ve noticed that what is often ignored in these articles is discussion of the external factors that can undermine efforts to transform schools or improve teacher quality.

What good are stellar teachers when students miss school because they don’t have a warm coat? Or they can’t afford the materials necessary for their school project? How can students study for exams when they are worried about where they are going to sleep for the night? View full article »

Growing Hope Against Hunger

Sesame Street Muppet Lily

Image credit: Sesame Workshop

This past Sunday, the Muppets and people of Sesame Street greeted a new neighbor. Seven-year-old Lily is a one-of-a-kind character: you can’t miss her magenta skin or flaming red hair. But the problem she faced in Sesame Street’s prime time special, “Growing Hope Against Hunger,” is, unfortunately, hardly unique.

The Department of Agriculture estimates that 17 million children, or one in four, have limited or uncertain access to affordable food. Of these kids, more than half are under the age of six. In “Growing Hope Against Hunger,” Lily represents all of these boys and girls. She tells Elmo and the gang that she’s never really sure where her next meal is coming from, and frequents a local food pantry and community garden with her parents. View full article »

Today’s Site Coordinator Snapshot is by Network Communications Specialist Erica Rafferty.

Nancy Essary

Communities In Schools Site Coordinator Nancy Essary can sum up the value of her work in a single moment.

It’s funny how a single moment can shape your point of view, your beliefs and sometimes your life. For Nancy Essary, a site coordinator with Communities In Schools of East Texas for the past five and a half years, that moment happened on the first day of school this year.

Originally, my post about Nancy Essary was about how she spends every summer with Communities In Schools delivering lunches across Diana, Texas to low-income students whose next meal is not always certain. An undeniably powerful story, you can watch a video of Nancy telling the story at the bottom of this post.

But when she told me about the first day of school this year, and of a single, simple moment that she will never forget, I knew that, too, was a story to be shared. View full article »