EEUU: As Schools Tackle Poverty, Attendance Goes Up, But Academic Gains Are Tepid

América del Norte/EEUU/edweek.org

Resumen: la noticia hace referencia a los esfuerzos de la Ciudad de Nueva York para convertir a decenas de escuelas de bajo rendimiento en modelos educativos exitosos, inyectándoles una gama de servicios de salud, y de apoyo social y emocional para estudiantes y las familias de los  estudiantes. Casi tres años después del inicio del programa, los resultados de la escuela PS 123, con sus 530 estudiantes, ofrecen una pequeña ventana a lo que la iniciativa más grande de la ciudad está viendo: un aumento en la asistencia estudiantil y la participación de la familia en las actividades escolares, una caída en el ausentismo crónico, Progreso.  «Eso no es una gran cosa para nadie, pero, en realidad, eso es enorme cuando se trabaja con la demografía con la que trabajamos», dijo Hernández.

P.S. 123, a K-8 school in Harlem, had been a chaotic place when Melitina Hernandez arrived as principal in 2013. Students would often run out of class to get attention. Staff members sometimes dodged confrontational parents. The school had old computers and tattered textbooks.

So Hernandez and her staff set out to make big changes with a $4 million grant from the state. They started with upgrading technology and other classroom amenities. They also turned their attention to the needs of the school’s large population of homeless children. Then their efforts kicked into higher gear in 2014 when P.S. 123 became part of New York City’s broad efforts to turn around dozens of low-performing schools by injecting them with a range of health, social-emotional, and academic support services for students and their families.

Nearly three years later, the results at P.S. 123, with its 530 students, offer a small window into what the city’s larger initiative is seeing: an increase in student attendance and family participation in school activities, a drop in chronic absenteeism, but uneven academic progress. Just 17 percent of P.S. 123’s students in grades 3-8 were proficient on the state’s English Language Arts exam in 2016, but in 2015, it had been even lower at 7 percent.

«That’s not a big thing to anyone else, but, in actuality, that’s huge when you work with the demographics that we work with,» Hernandez said.

Flooding impoverished schools with a range of services and resources is not new, and there’s still lively debate in education circles about whether it’s something schools should take on.

Commonly referred to as «community schools» or «whole-child» initiatives, the approach has been used in districts from Tacoma, Wash., to Cincinnati for several years, but the movement has picked up steam more recently amid a backlash against single-measure, test-based accountability and as an alternative to closing long-struggling schools. It’s gotten robust support from the nation’s teachers’ unions. And some states are looking to incorporate the features of community schools in their plans required by the new federal education law, the Every Student Succeeds Act.

Students at P.S. 188 help clean up their classroom before the last day of the official semester in New York City public schools. The school provides an on-site nurse practitioner, mental health counseling, and other services meant to make it a hub of the community.

Students at P.S. 188 help clean up their classroom before the last day of the official semester in New York City public schools. The school provides an on-site nurse practitioner, mental health counseling, and other services meant to make it a hub of the community.
—Mark Abramson for Education Week.

Pennsylvania, for example, intends to allow districts to use a community schools approach to tackle the problem of chronic absenteeism, to increase the roles that parents play in schools, to address students’ social and emotional needs, and to provide more after-school opportunities, said Pedro Rivera, the state’s education secretary.

«We know that in today’s society, our children … regardless of class, come to our institutions with various needs,» Rivera said. «When properly implemented and supported, community schools will again allow schools to be the nucleus or the hub of their communities.»

Whether community schools initiatives will continue to gather momentum is unclear. President Donald Trump’s proposed federal budget threatens to slash several funding streams that districts, communities, and nonprofit partners use to fund community schools and whole-child initiatives. And the research on whether a community schools strategy is an effective way to increase student achievement paints a complicated, sometimes contradictory, picture.

Benefits for Attendance

An independent study released earlier this year on the Communities in Schools program, one of the country’s largest whole-child initiatives that focuses on dropout prevention, found that while on-time graduation rates rose and the numbers of dropouts decreased in schools with the program, comparison schools also saw their graduation rates go up.

Attendance was higher in elementary schools in the program than in a comparison group of schools, according to the study by MDRC which looked at select schools in Texas and North Carolina.

Test scores improved at both Communities in Schools sites and the comparison schools at the elementary and high school levels. But at the middle school level, state test scores did not improve at those sites, although they did at the comparison schools.

But Linda Darling-Hammond, a longtime education scholar and president of the left-leaning Learning Policy Institute, said there is evidence that the strategy can be used to improve schools. What matters, more often than not, is the implementation, she said.

Schools that use the approach successfully, Darling-Hammond said, know the specific needs of their community and tailor services to meet those and forge strong relationships with families and communities.

In a recent report by the National Education Policy Center and the Learning Policy Institute, researchers analyzed more than 125 studies and research reviews on community schools, and found test score gains showed up in years three, four, and five. In the shorter term, researchers saw improvement in students’ health, attentiveness, and behavior, Darling-Hammond said.

«Whenever you do major structural reforms, if you are successful, the first thing that will respond is attendance,» she said. «And then you will see increases in kids … coming to school, staying in school, graduating, which actually has a much bigger effect on their later life outcomes than test scores.»

Though addressing the needs that poor students face outside of school is important, improving the quality of instruction is the most essential part of making schools better, said Paul Reville, who runs the Education Redesign Lab at the Harvard Graduate School of Education.

«I’d hate to see [community schools] undermined by having unrealistic expectations of it being a short-term silver bullet to bringing about success in these schools,» Reville said. «It’s one piece of a comprehensive strategy for turning around chronically underperforming schools.»

Massive Effort Aimed at Struggling Schools

In New York City, schools like P.S. 123 are in a special category of community schools—a multi-million dollar initiative called «renewal schools» aimed at staving off a state takeover or shutdown of campuses that had lagged academically for years.

Buoyed by some of the results in the wider community schools’ program, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced in May that he will expand the number of participating schools in the fall to 215 , increasing the scale of the program to one previously unseen in the country. The schools will serve about 100,000 students, far bigger than most school districts in the United States. But critics say de Blasio’s embrace of the community schools approach is troubling, since the academic improvements have been modest at best.

Students at P.S. 188 in New York socialize on the playground during the last week of school.
—Mark Abramson for Education Week.

English/language arts and math proficiency rates rose by 5.7 percent and 1.8 percent, respectively, from the 2014-15 school year to the 2015-16 school year, according to city data. Graduation rates for students in community schools averaged a 4.7 percent increase year over year. Chronic absenteeism declined by 3.5 percent in community schools, compared to a little over 1 percent citywide.

«We are targeting really high-need schools that are in neighborhoods with entrenched poverty, so the numbers are not where we want them to be. But we have been pleased with the growth early on,» said Chris Caruso, the executive director of New York City’s community schools program. «A lot of this is about changing culture.»

New York City Chancellor Carmen Fariña stressed that community schools are one of many strategies the district is using to improve schools, and that they offer parents, students, and teachers key advantages. GED and English-as-a-second-language classes for adults help parents participate in their children’s education. The schools provide mental health counselors and other staff from community-based organizations, which frees up teachers and principals to focus on instruction, she said.

A major benefit, Fariña said, are the experiences community schools bring to low-income children that are typical in middle- and upper-income communities. Playing chess, raising chickens, and learning to code, to name a few.

«You don’t ever give up on any community and any child, and this is what we are doing,» she said. «You have to serve the whole child, we are talking about social, emotional, academic learning–what we call the three pillars of education.»

Still, in the city’s renewal schools—where the challenges are even greater and the resources have been more robust—results so far from the community schools initiative show modest, but promising signs. In renewal high schools, the graduation rate jumped on average nearly five points in 2016, to 59 percent. But, that still lagged the city average of 73 percent.

Graduation rates at renewal high schools did not increase more than at comparable high schools, and test scores did not show statistically significant gains compared to select non-renewal schools that did not get extra city resources, according to Aaron Pallas, a professor at Teachers College, Columbia University, who recently analyzed city education data.

But city education officials have called Pallas’s analysis «flawed,» arguing, in part, that renewal schools were chosen based on strict selection criteria that did not match the criteria used in his analysis.

One pro-charter group that has been highly critical of de Blasio’s education agenda—Families for Excellent Schools—thinks a smarter approach would be to shut down the renewal schools and give students the option to attend high-performing schools, including charters.

Others argue that until the city does something dramatic to break up schools with high concentrations of poverty, there won’t be any major academic breakthroughs.

Zeroing In on Chronically Absent Students

While the city’s community schools use a wide variety of strategies to address each school’s and neighborhood’s needs, they all rely on an on-site director as a key ally to principals and the main connection to outside partners. At P.S. 123, Hernandez points to two people who are essential to her school’s program: Jeanine Lascelles, the community school director, and Raymond Blanchard, the mental health clinician.

Lascelles oversees a team of 10, including six «success mentors,» who work directly with 112 students who were chronically absent. The mentors are frontline advocates for homeless students, who may need extra tutoring, an extension to finish an assignment, or more basic supports. The mentors conduct daily check-ins to ensure that students show up to class and make home visits to families. They also meet weekly with the liaison at the shelter in the neighborhood. And when students improve, mentors notify parents through «celebration calls,» Lascelles said.

Their efforts are paying off. About 85 percent of the students who were part of that targeted effort improved attendance over the past year, Lascelles said.

Blanchard, along with other staff members, provide counseling to students and their families, and training for teachers to better recognize signs that misbehaving students need counseling services. They are also trained on de-escalation techniques and other ways to support students, including knowing when a child may just need to take a walk or require additional counseling.

«The learning is 100 percent important, but it’s hard for the students to learn if they are coming in worrying about where they are going to sleep, what they are going to eat, different things like that,» Blanchard said. «It’s providing them support on that emotional level so that they can come in express themselves, let that information out, and then be able to go into the classroom and continue with their day, to continue with learning.»

Fuente: http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2017/06/07/when-a-community-loses-its-schools.html

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Hong Kong: Hard work by students at grassroots’ school pays off

Asia/China/Atimes.com

Resumen: Muchos estudiantes de primaria de una escuela reconocida por admitir a niños desfavorecidos han ganado lugares en las escuelas secundarias favoritas de Hong Kong este año. Alrededor de un tercio de los estudiantes de primaria de la Escuela de Comerciantes de Pescado Fresco, que se conoce por admitir a niños desfavorecidos, se dirigen a las renombradas escuelas secundarias de Hong Kong este mes de septiembre, de acuerdo con los resultados de asignación de Secundaria One publicados el martes.

Around a third of primary-six students from Fresh Fish Traders’ School, which is known for admitting underprivileged kids, are heading to Hong Kong’s renowned secondary schools this September, according to Secondary One allocation results released on Tuesday.

Lau Ka-yan, 12, the eldest daughter of a family of six living in a subdivided flat in Sham Shui Po, will be attending Wai Kiu College, her first choice, Apple Daily reported.

For the past two years, the schoolgirl studied diligently six hours a day and spent her weekends in a tutorial center or students’ study room to revise, as her home was too crowded. Lau expressed deep gratitude to her mother and teachers and attributed her success to their patience and teaching.

Lau said she is wants to become a nurse when she grows up.

Wong Yuen-ying, another grassroots student at the same school, is heading to CCC Ming Kei College, also her first choice, Oriental Daily reported.

Wong, who was born to a Hong Kong father and Vietnamese mother, said learning Chinese characters was hard at first. She overcame it by copying the characters and reading Chinese materials online more often to help boost her reading comprehension skills.

She also went to tutorial classes for English and mathematics on weekends in a bid to get better academic results

Fuente: http://www.atimes.com/article/hard-work-students-grassroots-school-pays-off/

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Las claves del éxito de las universidades catalanas

Jessica Mouzo

No hay receta para el éxito que tenga un solo ingrediente. Tampoco para despuntar en los ranking de universidades. En todo caso, dicen los implicados, hay un cúmulo de factores. “Aunque estas clasificaciones hay que mirarlas con cuidado porque subes y bajas con facilidad”, matiza Margarita Arboix, rectora de la Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona (UAB), una de las instituciones mejor posicionadas en el informe de la Fundación Cyd (Conocimiento y Desarrollo). No hay parámetro en el que no se cuele, entre los primeros puestos, alguna universidad catalana, especialmente las que se levantan alrededor del área metropolitana de Barcelona: la UAB, la Pompeu Fabra (UPF) y la Universidad de Barcelona (UB). Su secreto, dicen, una mezcla de capacidad de atracción de talento, internacionalización y, sobre todo, calidad docente.

Las tres tienen en común el ecosistema empresarial, científico y tecnológico que las rodea. “El sistema se ve favorecido por un entorno de altísimo desarrollo, donde es más fácil el fenómeno de la colaboración. Tener un entorno rico en oportunidades, ayuda”, apunta Màrius Rodriguez, vicerrector de Relaciones Institucionales de la UAB. “Tenemos poca transferencia de conocimiento pero tenemos buena ciencia, que es la condición para avanzar y tener buena transferencia”, agrega Jaume Casals, rector de la UPF. También cuentan con mecanismos para sortear la rigidez en la contratación docente y atraer talento. “Nuestro secreto es el espíritu de renovación, la juventud y la lucha contra la telaraña normativa. Hemos desarrollado un sistema que nos ha permitido reclutar personas de otros entornos, personas consagradas a la universidad y a la investigación”, sostiene Casals. Por ejemplo, convocatorias de la Generalitat como las de investigadores ICREA para fichar talentos docentes que, por restricciones burocráticas o económicas, no podrían entrar en la rueda del profesorado con plaza fija.

Tener a los mejores docentes y cuidarlos supone un efecto llamada al talento. “El hecho de tener un buen nivel de docencia le da prestigio a tu facultad, atraes estudiantes buenos y eso es tener el talento garantizado”, sintetiza Arboix, que aboga por cuidar a profesores e investigadores y facilitarles el trabajo. “Hay que invertir en personal de apoyo para ayudarlos en sus investigaciones. La burocracia es impresionante. Hay que cuidar el talento y darle instrumentos para hacer su trabajo más fácil”, señala la rectora.

Evaluación trimestral

La última arista del triángulo del éxito es la internacionalización. “Las conexiones internacionales, la tradición de movilidad de ir y recibir gente ayuda a tejer redes internas para investigación y captar talento”, apunta Ernest Pons, portavoz de la UB. “Tenemos una clarísima vocación internacional. Los referentes más potentes los encuentras en contextos amplios”, apostilla Martínez.

A ojos del alumno, la excelencia del sistema catalán lo resume Joan Carles Rodríguez, estudiante de tercer curso de Derecho en la UPF. “Hay tres elementos que marcan la diferencia en la UPF. Primero, la calidad docente, pues la mayoría son profesores que tienen experiencias profesionales, no solo docentes. Segundo, el modelo de la UPF está basado en seminarios y evaluación trimestral, que hacen que practiquemos en grupos reducidos los conocimientos adquiridos de teoría y que seamos más constantes. Y tercero, la internacionalización: uno de cada tres alumnos hace una estancia fuera de la universidad”, concluye. Joan Carles terminará la carrera el año que viene en la Universidad Católica de Milán.

Fuente del articulo: http://ccaa.elpais.com/ccaa/2017/05/19/catalunya/1495178078_176609.html

Fuente de la imagen:

http://ep01.epimg.net/ccaa/imagenes/2017/05/19/catalunya/1495178078_176609_1495178247_noticia_normal_recorte1.jpg

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Puerto Rico: Urgente el cambio de estrategias para una excelencia educativa

Centro América/Puerto Rico/21 de diciembre de 2016/Fuente: elsoldelaflorida

“Preocúpate por la calidad, mucha gente no está preparada para un entorno donde la excelencia es lo que se espera.” Steve Jobs.

Steve Jobs, según citado en Moll (2014),  Excelencia, como docente, no debes obsesionarte por la perfección de tu trabajo, sino por conseguir la excelencia de tus alumnos. Hay que tener un norte y reflexionar sobre como educamos preguntarse; ¿estoy trabajando para que mis estudiantes alcancen la excelencia o fabricando evidencias? Es lamentable que un país con un presupuesto consolidado recomendado para el Año Fiscal 2015-2016 en educación que asciende a $2,895,920,000 que incluyen $1,648,078,000 provenientes de la Resolución Conjunta del Presupuesto General, $24,454,000 de Asignaciones Especiales, $3,200,000 de Fondos Especiales Estatales, $1,159,517,000 de Fondos Federales y $60,671,000 de otros ingresos, Departamento de Educación (DE) 2015, los resultados en pruebas estandarizadas locales (META-PR) nacionales e internacionales (PISA) se evidencie niveles por debajo del promedio.

Según el López (2016), del diario local el Nuevo Día los resultados de las pruebas PISA dados a conocer, los alumnos en Puerto Rico obtuvieron una puntuación de 403 en la prueba de Ciencia, 90 puntos por debajo del promedio mundial. En la prueba de Matemáticas, la puntuación alcanzada fue de 378, de un promedio de 490; mientras que el resultado en la prueba de Lectura fue de 410, muy por debajo del promedio de 493.

Urge trazar un plan donde se reevalúe las metas, visión, misión y estrategias  de la educación en el país. La clase magisterial en Puerto Rico es altamente cualificada alcanzando grados de maestrías y doctorados en educación y especialidades, pero donde queda el tiempo para trabajar realmente con docencia. El maestro esta arropado de documentos que completar, evidencia que entregar y su tiempo de capacitación profesional y período de apoyo a la docencia o actividades no se utiliza para estos fines de elaborar actividades, preparar experiencias educativas enriquecedoras y motivadoras, coordinar actividades con recursos de biblioteca o externos prepararnos para ofrecer la educación de excelencia a la que aspiramos para los estudiantes.

Hay que enfocarse en reestructurar, las facilidades tecnológicas, internet de alta velocidad en las salas de clase, currículos variados y atractivos  de modalidad presencial y online, rediseñar horarios y períodos de clase. Maestros de nivel primario  elemental especialistas en materias dejar a un lado la práctica de grupos islas donde un maestro enseña todas las clases excepto inglés  pero no hay dominio de contenido y la carga de documentos a realizar es inmensa. Todo redunda en docentes con exceso de carga administrativa, pocos recursos y desmotivación.

Es muy cierto que se tienen que estudiar modelos educativos exitosos, como por ejemplo Singapur y Finlandia, pero esto no significa que adaptemos el modelo de otro, es hacer un estudio profundo con un plan a largo y largo corto plazo sobre cada programa educativo, considerando  la idiosincrasia, utilización de fondos de manera estratégica, necesidades y áreas de oportunidad de los docentes, recursos en las escuelas, planta física, integración de la tecnología en el área docente  y administrativa y accesible a todos los estudiantes. La excelencia es compromiso de todos, la responsabilidad es compartida por que no se  trata de unos cuantos es cuestión de país.

Fuente: https://elsoldelaflorida.com/urgente-el-cambio-de-estrategias-para-una-excelencia-educativa/

Imagen: https://i1.wp.com/elsoldelaflorida.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/Excelencia-educativa.jpg?resize=696%2C448

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