We shine the spotlight on some of the many 黑料福利社 project partners that make a difference in children’s daily lives on a national, state, local and school level.
Many large school systems and government bodies with limited capacity look at a young person鈥檚 academic success through a binary lens: students are either good or bad. The grey areas of a child鈥檚 experience go unnoticed and unaddressed.
These grey areas extend beyond the classroom. Fortunately, programs outside of the traditional schools鈥 systems can help. In this effort, many of our project partners are leading the way.聽
鈥淣onprofits can innovate and iterate faster than a school system,鈥 says Heidi Hernandez Gatty, Vice President of 黑料福利社鈥 Client Services and an acting Governing Board Member for the Walnut Creek School District. 鈥淢ore often than not, school budgets are so tight, there鈥檚 no money to test new ideas and approaches.鈥
This school year, children around the country experience an achievement gap exacerbated by entering the classrooms without their basic needs fulfilled. More than one-third of 黑料福利社鈥 90-plus fiscally sponsored projects support these children and their families with access to food, housing, healthcare services, supplies or a reliable group of peers.聽
Our projects also take on the important role of speaking on behalf of children.
鈥淜ids can’t advocate for themselves,鈥 says Julia Hohner, Communications and Development Director for Groundwork Ohio, a 黑料福利社 project partner. 鈥淭hey don’t have super PACs or roles in government. Advocacy groups try to fill the gaps as much as we can to improve outcomes for kids, to better support families.鈥
Groundwork Ohio educates Ohio鈥檚 key decision makers about the importance of quality, early learning and healthy development from prenatal care to children up to the age of 5.聽
鈥淣onprofits provide a good, nonpartisan, impartial force and holds an important role in holding institutions accountable to outcomes, to what they said they鈥檙e going to do,鈥 Hohner says. 鈥淲e are able to share data that stakeholders otherwise wouldn鈥檛 be able to see 鈥 to tell a clear story of how our state鈥檚 most at-risk children are faring.鈥
Groundwork wants policy makers and representatives to understand and fight for more accessibility to early childcare.
鈥淸Groundwork Ohio and other advocacy groups鈥橾 only motivation is to improve outcomes for kids,鈥 Hohner says. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 get caught up in politics or bureaucracy. We don鈥檛 profit financially from investments in early learning. We鈥檙e an objective voice for Ohio鈥檚 young children.鈥
Getting Students in the Classroom聽
Attendance in a productive classroom environment is fundamental to every student’s success. School attendance is an indicator of how that student鈥檚 community, faculty, and family are engaging a child in their education.聽
Hedy Chang, the executive director of 黑料福利社鈥 partner project Attendance Works, started a by stating the obvious: 鈥淎t the core of school improvement and education reform is an assumption so widely understood that it is rarely invoked: Students have to be present and engaged in order to learn.鈥
in the wake of this 2008 research paper. Their mission is to advance student success and help close equity gaps by reducing chronic absence.聽
Chang, along with Mariajos茅 Romero, PhD., found that children living in poverty were four times more likely to be chronically absent than their more affluent peers. They went on to give recommendations on the importance of tracking thousands of kids who were chronically absent, or missing more than 10 percent of the school year.聽
Ten years later, the federal government is now reporting on the metric. There were more than 8 million students, or 16 percent of children in schools across America, chronically absent in the 2015 to 2016 school year.
Measuring chronic absenteeism is just the first step to improving attendance. Each state, city and school has to meet students where they are. When schools in the District of Philadelphia sent postcards to guardians that encouraged them to improve their attendance,.
Traditionally, education systems focus on penalizing students for not conforming to established codes of behavior like attendance.聽
黑料福利社鈥 project partner One Day at a Time (ODAT) says that the education system tends to blame parents for absenteeism.聽聽
鈥淲e blame parents without always thinking about what they鈥檙e going through,鈥 says , Executive Director and founder of ODAT. 鈥淪ome of them lack transportation to get kids to school. Or they鈥檙e working multiple jobs and can鈥檛 get there in time. They may have four or five other kids they need to drop off, but kids get held accountable. So, how do we help kids address these things and advocate for themselves?鈥
Mentoring Children in Need of Extra Support
ODAT is a youth mentorship and development program serving Contra Costa and San Joaquin Counties. They offer ground-level advocacy for children. They often act as a liaison between schools, children, family and their communities. ODAT also and 聽to offer safe environments and relationships to children.聽
For Rodriguez, the work is personal. He and his team of mentors are a product of some of the same disadvantages and adversities facing his program鈥檚 participants. In fact, 98 percent of the mentors at ODAT went through the program themselves.聽
The ODAT team challenges youth by putting them into positions of leadership and gives them responsibility for their communities. This is an effort to build up their resilience and confidence or 鈥la confianza鈥 as Rodriguez says, meaning confidence, trust, reliance, faith, reliability and beliefs.
鈥淚 think if you use trauma the right way, you can learn to embrace it and help others with compassion,鈥 Rodriguez says. 鈥淔or us, what we do is we bring a sense of consistency for kids. We鈥檙e always there. Not just after school, but all the time. We鈥檙e there to check in on their attendance, their homework; we鈥檙e entrenched in their lives.鈥澛
He says that traditional education systems measure a child鈥檚 success based on how well they do in limited educational settings that emphasize test scores and formal education.聽
鈥淲e want to inspire kids on the importance of education, but not every kid needs to go to college,鈥 Rodriguez says. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e thinking about how to make a career and be able to manage a family. Society pushes higher education so hard that it鈥檚 very challenging to these kids. You can go into the trades and make a very good living, too.鈥澛
Solutions-oriented Advocacy for Children
Sometimes the best advocacy work for children is simply listening to them.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 give up on anybody,鈥 Rodriguez says. 鈥淵ou also have to have the understanding that you鈥檙e not going to be able to help everybody. Sometimes you have to just be honest and say: 鈥業鈥檝e never been through that traumatic event, I don鈥檛 completely understand.鈥 We have to encourage young people to speak up for themselves. Then, we need to sit back and let youth be part of the decision making process.鈥
out of Georgetown University, they state that 鈥渕issing school has long been a cause for blame and punishment — directed at either the students or parents — for failing to comply with student rules. That has led to punitive approaches ranging from suspensions to jail time that have shown limited success in curbing absenteeism.鈥
Based on qualitative and quantitative data that is now available, they lay out recommendations to curb absenteeism. It starts with setting consistent, nationwide standards on what defines a day of school, what defines an absence and who a student is. Then, they recommend supporting data collection and monitoring it with established auditing systems. Finally, making the data public, then training faculty and staff on how to record and use the data.聽
for the state when investments are made in early childcare.聽 Using data and findings , Groundwork sites that expanding child care subsidies from the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) can lead to overall better economic and social health for the state of Ohio.
鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to convince people to really double down and invest in things that have long term investments because we have term-limited representatives,鈥 Hohner says.聽
Most recently, the advocacy group worked with Ohio鈥檚 newly appointed governor, Gov. Mike Dewine and members of the General Assembly, in young children in the fiscal year 2020-2021 budget.
If Ohio were to expand eligibility to child care subsidies from families making 130 percent of the federal poverty rate to 150 percent, there would be a 13 percent return on investment for the state, which is about 鈥渢he highest return you can get,鈥 according to Hohner. And, roughly 12,100 children could be lifted out of poverty. These advancements are mostly due to the 3,900 more women who would be able to enter the workplace and contribute taxes.聽聽
One out of five children under the age of 18 in the US are living under the federal poverty limit, according to the 2017 American Community Survey (ACS). In 2017, the federal poverty limit for a household of two was an annual income of $15,877, according to the Census Bureau. For a family of four, it was $25,094.聽
In Ohio, more than 26 percent of children under the age of 5 live in poverty. In Ohio鈥檚 Appalachian region, an extremely rural part of the聽
state, more than 30 percent of children under the age of 5 live in poverty. And, only about 50 percent of those children ages 0 to 4 are eligible for access to publicly-funded early childhood education.聽
鈥淪chool is a community,鈥 Hernandez Gatty says. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e a parent having a hard time, let the community know 鈥 if something is going sideways, we鈥檙e here to support the student, your family.鈥
The range of children’s needs is quite wide and sometimes parents are scared to reach out when they need help.
鈥淸The school] community is different than other kinds of community,鈥 Hernandez Gatty, 黑料福利社鈥 VP of Client Services says. 鈥淧ersonally, I think it鈥檚 critically important to students because the school community is the template for how you look at community in the future. It鈥檚 the first place you really step out of your house. So, when you look to build community in the future, you look at that template. If your school has a range of ideas, creeds, races then you imagine all community to look like that.鈥