FOCUS DC News Wire 4/29/2015

Friends of Choice in Urban Schools (FOCUS) is now the DC Charter School Alliance!

Please visit www.dccharters.org to learn about our new organization and to see the latest news and information related to DC charter schools.

The FOCUS DC website is online to see historic information, but is not actively updated.

NEWS

D.C. Superintendent Grants $220K for Summer Programs for Students [Friendship PCS and Paul PCS mentioned]
The Washington Informer
WI Web Staff 
April 28, 2015

The District of Columbia Office of the State Superintendent of Education has awarded $220,000 in grant funding to several local education agencies and organizations in the first "College, Credential and Career (C3) Ready" summer initiative aimed at middle school students.

Beginning this summer, the grant will serve 670 sixth- through eighth-graders in programs that will give students up-close exposure to high-growth, high-wage career fields in D.C.

"We know that successful preparation for college and careers starts early," said Dr. Antoinette Mitchell, OSSE assistant superintendent of Postsecondary and Career Education. "The C3 Ready summer initiative will engage more District middle school students in educational summer programming that also allows them to connect their personal strengths to college options and career pathways."

Grant recipients for the programs, which will start in June, include City Gate Inc.; Higher Achievement; Kid Power; Multicultural Career Internship Program; Friendship Public Charter Schools; Paul Public Charter School; and District of Columbia Public Schools.

Segregation of the nation’s children starts with preschool, new report finds
The Washington Post
By Lyndsey Layton
April 29, 2015

Publicly funded preschools across the country are largely segregated by race and income, and poor children are typically enrolled in the lowest quality programs, according to a new report released Wednesday by researchers at the National Center for Children and Families at Teachers College, Columbia University.

While states more than doubled their investments in preschool between 2003 and 2013, when 1.3 million three- and four-year-olds were enrolled at a cost of $5.4 billion, most classrooms were economically segregated, the researchers found.

“If every child could be in a high-quality program, we could all go home and not worry about it,” said Jeanne Reid, who wrote the report with Sharon Lynn Kagan. “But a lot of programs are not high quality, and low-income children are most likely to be in low-quality programs.”

That’s especially troubling because research shows that children from low-income families benefit academically from being in a classroom with children from more affluent families, Reid said.

“When we talk about equity, it’s not just the idea that there should be equity of access to preschool but equity at the classroom level, in terms of who you share a classroom with,” she said. “A lot of attention hasn’t been paid to the difference that it makes. And there’s research that shows it does make a difference, along with the quality of the teacher, class size, use of a comprehensive curriculum.”

In state preschool programs, almost half of all children are in mostly minority classrooms and three out of four of those children come from low-income families, she said. About 17 percent of children are in classrooms that could be considered racially and socioeconomically diverse, Reid said.

Reid and Kagan examined data on children’s learning and the composition of their preschool classrooms. They found that children who attend preschools where there is a concentration of poor and minority children generally learn less than children who might also be poor and minority but who attend school with children from more affluent families.

They looked at research that examined the academic growth of groups of children from low-income families, some of whom went to preschool with other mostly poor children and some of whom attended economically mixed classrooms.

Children in the mixed classrooms learned more math and language skills than children in the mostly low-income programs. In one large study, children in the middle income or affluent classrooms learned more language and math skills, regardless of the children’s own family income level and race or ethnicity.

Those findings fall in line with research done at the elementary school level, including one 2010 study in Montgomery County, Md., which examined 850 children living in public housing who were randomly assigned to elementary schools. Students who attended integrated schools showed greater academic gains than those in high-poverty neighborhoods and schools, even though the high-poverty schools spent more per pupil.

One explanation for the differences in learning could be that better teachers are more likely to be found in affluent schools than in high-poverty schools. But studies that have controlled for differences in teacher quality have found the same effects, Reid and Kagan said.

President Obama has been promoting the idea of universal preschool, trying unsuccessfully to convince Congress to help states fund preschool for every 4-year-old from a low-income family. That would be in addition to Head Start, the federal government’s early childhood program for poor children from birth to age 5. Head Start served about 900,000 three-, four- and five-year-olds in the 2013-2014 school year at a cost of $7.3 billion.

Governors from both political parties and mayors in cities including New York and Seattle have heavily invested in preschool, arguing that it is one of the most effective ways to narrow the achievement gap between poor and affluent children. Advocates also say children enrolled in high-quality preschool gain lifelong benefits, such as better jobs, higher wages and a lower likelihood of being involved with the criminal justice system or needing social services.

Reid and Kagan highlight several preschool programs that have intentionally sought a balance between poor and affluent children.

Morris Jeff Community School, a public charter school in New Orleans, is one example. Morris Jeff has three preschool classes where 67 percent of the children are from low-income families and 33 percent are from more affluent families. The school receives a per-pupil subsidy of $4,700 from the state for each poor child and it charges the same amount in tuition from the affluent families. That money still doesn’t pay for the cost of running the all-day preschool classes; the school raises funds from private sources to make up the difference.

The result is a preschool where 48 percent of the children are white, 45 percent are black, 5 percent are multiracial, 2 percent are Hispanic and 10 percent have special needs. At the start of school last year, about 25 percent of the children began with a “mastery” in grade-level math and 10 percent showed “mastery” in language skills. By the end of the year, 80 percent of the children showed mastery in both subjects.

Reid and Kagan make several recommendations about ways to create preschool programs that are more socioeconomically balanced, touching on funding, transportation and location.

FROM FOCUS

Upcoming events

 

 

Click Here  >

 

__________

 

Mailing Archive: