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News from the Wallace Foundation

NEW YORK, NY, June 21, 2010 – With an initial investment of $9 million, The Wallace Foundation today announced it is launching an initiative to provide disadvantaged urban students with more time for high-quality learning – both through improved summer learning opportunities, and through extending the school day and school year.

“It’s becoming increasingly clear that the traditional school calendar may not be ideal for students, especially those in the most need,” said M. Christine DeVita, president of The Wallace Foundation. “If we provide more high-quality learning time for disadvantaged students by offering summer learning and extending the school day – and use that time effectively – we may be able to substantially improve students’ achievement.”

The initiative will involve three strategies:

    * Building awareness among educators and policymakers of the value of adding more time for high-quality learning, including identifying what is already known, and what policies are needed to make progress;
    * Helping leading national organizations that do a good job of educating children in now-underutilized hours to reach more children; and,
    * Testing how programs that provide more high-quality learning time might be made available widely in one or more school districts to help disadvantaged children, and evaluating these efforts for results.

The foundation has joined with an initial group of partners to help build understanding and develop knowledge that districts, cities and states can use to take action. Those include: The National Summer Learning Association, The National Center on Time & Learning, BELL (Building Educated Leaders for Life), Higher Achievement, Horizons National, RAND, MDRC, and Child Trends.

Wallace’s initiative comes amid increased interest in the issue of more time for learning, and questions about what approaches are most effective in boosting student achievement.

In the area of summer learning, a century of research has demonstrated that over the summer break common in most school districts, all children – but especially poor children – lose some of what they have learned during the school year. More recently, a 2007 study published in the American Sociological Review by researchers Karl L. Alexander, Doris R. Entwisle and Linda S. Olson concluded that because this “summer learning loss” was cumulative, about two-thirds of the ninth-grade reading achievement gap between poor children and their wealthier counterparts could be explained by unequal access to summer learning opportunities during the elementary school years. (They found one-third of the gap existed when children began school.)

Despite this evidence of the problem, less is known about what measures might be effective to solve it, especially on a wide scale, and what state and district policies would be needed to support those measures. Evaluations demonstrate that effective summer learning programs can reduce summer learning loss, especially in reading, as a Wallace-commissioned 2009 summary of research by Child Trends has shown. But there are few instances of those programs being successfully applied across a district – something Wallace hopes to test with one or more district partners.

In the area of extended learning time, the evidence is unclear about what it takes for more time added to the school day, week or year to make a difference in students’ academic achievement. Tutoring consistently produces learning gains, but group activities have been found to have inconsistent effects on learning. However, studies of extended learning time have shown positive effects on students’ school attendance, engagement and social and emotional development. In recent years, some selected charter and traditional public schools have begun to rethink the conventional, six-hour, 180-day school schedule, by integrating academics and enrichment activities into a redesigned school day.

The grants announced today include:

Building awareness of the value of adding more time for high-quality learning:

    * $350,000 over one year to the National Summer Learning Association, the Baltimore-based organization that promotes wider understanding of the value of  improving summer learning opportunities, and serves as a network hub providing tools and expertise for thousands of summer learning programs across the nation. Wallace’s grant will fund strategic planning and communications, as well as help the Association work with BELL, Higher Achievement and Horizons National to learn from each others’ work.
    * $250,000 over one year to the National Center on Time & Learning, the Boston-based organization that promotes wider understanding of the value of adding more time to the school day and year. The grant will fund communications activities as well as reports on what districts and states are doing around the nation to add more time for learning.

Funding leading providers of more learning time so they can serve more children:

    * $4 million over three years to Boston-based BELL (Building Educated Leaders for Life). Its six-week, all-day summer program supplements three hours of academics with enrichment courses, field trips and community service in Boston, Augusta, Ga., Baltimore, Charlotte, Detroit, New York City and Springfield, Mass.  An Urban Institute study found that BELL summer students outperformed a control group on reading tests and parental engagement.  BELL’s standardized assessments show its students posted five months’ grade-equivalent gains in reading and math during the summer.
    * $300,000 over one year to Norwalk, Connecticut-based Horizons National, which works closely with 19 private schools in Colorado, Connecticut, Georgia, Indiana, New Jersey, New York, Maryland, Massachusetts, Virginia and Washington DC, to provide students from public schools with summer academic and enrichment opportunities.  Horizons students consistently demonstrate gains in reading skills of more than three months as measured by STAR Reading assessment.  Additionally, a 2009 Wireless Generation report showed substantial gains in reading skills for Horizons’ youngest (K-2) students as compared to the loss experienced by the national average of a low-SES cohort.
    * $3 million over three years to Higher Achievement, which operates in Washington, D.C., Baltimore and Alexandria, Virginia.  The program, which pairs middle-school students with mentors who tutor and help them apply to competitive high schools, also offers activities such as trips to colleges.  A 2009 internal study found that more than half of the lower-achieving students in the Washington sites improved in math by at least one letter grade, while students overall considerably improved reading and math test scores.  Wallace funding will help support a formal, independent evaluation of the summer work.
    * $150,000 to Child Trends in Washington, D.C., over nine months, to develop a public report available by spring 2011 on what is known about the range of approaches for extending learning time, evaluations of the impact of extended learning time on student achievement, as well as leading programs and their features.

Testing and evaluating whether district summer learning programs could reduce or eliminate summer learning loss among their poorest students.

    * $635,000 over one year to RAND Corporation, for a study to help identify the key features that should be included in summer learning programs and ways to manage implementation challenges. The study would help guide the design of a demonstration of effective district summer learning programs. RAND will produce a public research report by April 2011 that is intended to be broadly useful to federal officials, districts, states and out-of-school time providers interested in developing effective summer learning programs and the policies to support them.
    * $600,000 over one year to MDRC to help Wallace identify one or more district partners to develop a demonstration of a summer learning program to be widely applied across a district and aimed at reducing or eliminating summer learning loss. MDRC would work closely with Wallace to help manage the work should one or more districts be identified that are willing and able to undertake a demonstration.

The Wallace Foundation is an independent, national foundation dedicated to supporting and sharing effective ideas and practices that expand learning and enrichment opportunities for all people. The Foundation maintains an online library of lessons at www.wallacefoundation.org about what it has learned, including knowledge from its current efforts aimed at: strengthening educational leadership to improve student achievement; helping disadvantaged students gain more time for learning through summer learning and an extended school day and year; enhancing out-of-school-time opportunities; and building appreciation and demand for the arts.

Arizona Child Care Association and local Early Care and Education Consortium members are raising public awareness of the devastating impact of the State child care turn-away list and asking elected official to restore child care funding for parents wanting to work, children needing safe and stimulating care, and child care providers who serve low income families.

In the current environment in our state, it is easy for the impact of one program to get lost among higher profile issues getting media attention. Yet, the longer families wait, the more it hurts parents, children, and child care providers. Over the past 15 months, 13,000 children in qualified low income working families have been denied. The denials will continue for another 13 months or longer unless the Governor or legislature acts to restore the child care subsidy.

The Early Care and Education Consortium has developed a video message that shows the impact of the waiting list, which you can view here. Click here to watch the Restore Child Care video.

Yesterday the Arizona Child Care Association sent letters to the Governor and legislators asking for the immediate restoration of child care subsidies for Arizona’s low-income working families.

You can click to send your own message to Governor Brewer Send Your Message

and your legislators Send Your Message

The email messages have been prepared, but you can change them to make the messages more personal from you. The message to Legislators begins “I am a child care provider in your district. Every day I see the good that we do and every day I see how much more we are needed” so be sure to customize your introduction.

Visit www.azcca.org for more information.

Are you finding it more challenging than ever to provide leadership to your sites? This seminar will help you maintain and continue to make program improvements while weathering cost-cutting and new requirements. Join afterschool professionals from all over Tucson who are tackling the same issue.
 
Sponsored by the Sonoran Alliance for Youth
 
When:
Friday, August 27 and Saturday, August 28, 2010
9:00 am – 5:00 pm
 
Where:
Hilton Tucson East
7600 E Broadway
Tucson, AZ 85710
 
Who should attend?
• New to the field Directors
• Experienced Directors
• Afterschool Coordinators
 
Cost:  $250 and includes breakfast, lunch and materials
 
What:
This training will focus on the administrative components of a quality afterschool program. Included will be effective systems to manage fiscal resources and administrative policies, evaluation and outcomes, workplace issues, strategies for recruitment and retention, staff development and training, ideas for building a family-responsive program, building a “learning organization,” leadership and management styles, and working collaboratively with schools and communities.
 
Goals:
• Recognize and address the unique context and components of an effective OST program
• Acquire skills and strategies for improving leadership and teamwork
• Learn strategies to support program improvement and development within your system
 
Topics Covered:
• Creating a Learning Organization
• Systems thinking
• How Do You Lead/Manage within your program?
• Supervisor competencies
• Situational Leadership
• How does your system, its policies/procedures, impact your program delivery?
• Building Strong Staff      
• Self-assessment
 
Lodging: Hilton Tucson East Rooms can be purchased for $69 plus tax if reserved ahead
 
Space is very limited so register online NOW! Registration ends when the seminar is sold out or July 30, whichever occurs first.
Click here to register: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/3QMXR5V
 
About the presenters:
The presenters for this session work with the National Institute on Out-of-School Time (NIOST). For more than two decades, NIOST has been the national leader in providing highly interactive, research based training for directors and staff, school administrators, community leaders, and others committed to providing high quality afterschool programs for children and youth.
 
Ellen Clippinger, MS Ed, is the founder and Chief Executive Officer of AYS, Inc., a not-for-profit youth-serving agency operating over 50 programs in a four-county area in the Indianapolis community. Ellen has been instrumental in piloting various types of programs to meet the needs of working parents-early childhood programs housed in school settings, wrap-around kindergarten programs within the school, as well as winter and spring breaks and summer camps. A summer camp devoted to arts education with a culminating final performance by the children and youth from the camp is now in its fifth season.
 
Lisa Rice, founder and director of Innovative Learning Solutions, has worked in all sectors of the afterschool field since 1984; public schools, universities, child care centers and nonprofit organizations. Lisa is known for her ability to work closely with program directors and staff to create training that specifically meets the program’s needs. She is able to facilitate long-range strategic planning retreats and consults with program leaders, boards and policymakers to build local, state and national systems that support high quality afterschool programs.
 
Space is very limited so register online NOW! Click here to register: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/3QMXR5V
 
Please call Marie Benson at 520-749-0147 or Lisa Rice at 520-982-4032 if you have any questions.

Name: Youth Service America Accepting Applications for STEMester of Service Grant Program

Sponsor: Learn and Serve America

Deadline: 7/15/2010

Amount: $5,000

Type: Education, Science & Technology

Description: Youth Service America is accepting applications for the second year of the STEMester of Service program.

Funded by Learn and Serve America, a program of the Corporation for National and Community Service, STEMester of Service incorporates YSA’s semester-long service-learning framework to engage educators and students in addressing critical environmental needs and connecting them to STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) curricula.

YSA is seeking ten middle schools with large populations of disadvantaged youth to join twenty returning STEMester of Service grantees. STEM schools must be located in one of the twelve states with highest dropout rates: Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Delaware, Georgia, Illinois, Louisiana, Nevada, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, and Washington.

The $5,000 grant (which includes travel and training at YSA’s Youth Service Institute in Detroit in October) supports teachers as they engage local partners and guide students in addressing local needs through planning and implementing sustainable service projects that will launch on the Martin Luther King, Jr. Day of Service (January 17, 2011) and culminate on Global Youth Service Day, (April 15-17, 2011).

Visit the YSA Web site for program information.

Link to RFP

Name: NCRR Science Education Partnership Award

Sponsor: Department of Health and Human Services

Deadline: 7/28/2010

Amount: Varies

Type: Science & Technology, Health, Education

Description: NCRR encourages applications to its Science Education Partnership Award (SEPA) program for the development and evaluation of innovative research education programs to improve PreK-12 research career opportunities and the community’s understanding of the health science advances supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH)-funded clinical and basic research. SEPA encourages dynamic partnerships between biomedical and clinical researchers and PreK-12 teachers and schools and other interested organizations. Particular importance will be given to applications that target PreK-12 and/or ISE/media topics that may not be addressed by existing curriculum, community-based or ISE/media activities.

Link to RFP

Get the children in your program engaged in the environment with a hands-on project they create and implement. The Captain Planet Foundation makes available grants, ranging from $250 to $2,500, for such projects.

Guidelines to be considered for a grant are that proposals must promote the understanding of environmental issues; focus on hands-on involvement; involve children ages 6 to 18; promote interaction and cooperation within the group; help children and youth develop planning and problem-solving skills; and include adult supervision. If awarded a grant, a commitment to follow-up communication with the Captain Planet Foundation also is required.

For more information on the foundation, go to http://captainplanetfoundation.org.

For information on the grants, including deadlines and a link to apply, go to http://captainplanetfoundation.org/default.aspx?pid=3&tab=apply.

1 Week Left to Turn in Your Afterschool Awards of Excellence Nominations!

The Afterschool Awards of Excellence recognize the often unappreciated work of afterschool programs, leaders and staff making a positive impact on the lives of Arizona children & youth!
 
Winners will receive a cash prize, free membership to the Center, free registration to the 2010 Afterschool Conference: Enriching Out-of-School Time Programming with STEM, and recognition at an Awards Luncheon on October 13th at the Arizona Biltmore Resort.

Turn in your nominations by Wednesday, June 30th!

Forms and guidelines are available at
http://azafterschool.org/News—Events/Afterschool-Awards-of-Excellence.aspx

or by contacting Caitlin King at 602.496.3308 or caking@azafterschool.org.

DoSomething.org has teamed up with The Jonas Brothers Change for the Children Foundation to award project grants to individuals who are taking action in their communities across the U.S. and Canada. Do you have a sustainable community action project, program or idea that focuses on: the Special Olympics, Diabetes Awareness, or Volunteerism? Then these are the grants for you and your program! While projects that cover any cause are eligible to apply, special focus will be given to these three causes (the Jonas Brothers’ causes!).

Ten projects will receive $1,500 grants for their projects or organizations. All of the winners will be featured on DoSomething.org and ChangefortheChildren.org, and celebrated through various marketing platforms.

Grant Details:

How much?: 10 $1,500 grants

Deadline?: July 15th

You will be notified whether or not you are a winner during the first week of August.

For more information please visit http://www.dosomething.org/grants/changeforthechildren

Questions? Please email grants@dosomething.org

About DoSomething.org: DoSomething.org is one of the largest organizations in the United States that helps young people rock causes they care about. A driving force in creating a culture of volunteerism, DoSomething.org is on track to activate two million young people in 2011. By leveraging the web, television, mobile, and pop culture, DoSomething.org inspires, empowers and celebrates a generation of doers:  teenagers who recognize the need to do something, believe in their ability to get it done, and then take action.  Plug in at www.DoSomething.org

About Jonas Brothers Change for the Children Foundation: We started The Jonas Brothers Change for the Children Foundation to support programs that motivate and inspire children to face adversity with confidence, determination and a will to succeed. And we think the best people to help children are their peers — kids helping other kids who are a little less fortunate. We have the power to change the world. And that’s what we’re going to do. Starting right here with The Jonas Brothers Change for the Children- and it’s all up to YOU!

The Full-Service Community Schools program, which is being carried out under FIE, encourages coordination of education, developmental, family, health, and other services through partnerships between: (1) public elementary and secondary schools and (2) CBOs and public-private ventures. Such collaboration will provide comprehensive education, social, and health services for students, families, and communities.

http://www2.ed.gov/programs/communityschools/applicant.html

Full Service Community Schools Applications are Available as of June 8, 2010.

Deadline of Notice of Intent to Apply: June 23, 2010.

Date of Pre-Application Meeting for interested applicants: June 17, 2010.

Deadline to Apply: July 23, 2010.

Name: Grants Notice

Sponsor: Bureau of Land Management

Deadline: 6/4/2010

Amount: Varies

Type: Education, Environment, Social & Economic

Description: The goals of the project are to provide young people with practical experiences in outdoor recreation management, including sustainable trail; signing and interpretation concepts, and resource protection strategies related to the location and development of recreation facilities. These experiences are expected to encourage an interest in the outdoors, natural resources, and the role of public lands in meeting the demand for high quality outdoor recreation experiences. Through this work, young people will gain a greater understanding of BLM¿s mission and possible career opportunities with the agency.

Link to RFP