Edutopia - August/September 2008 - (Page 34) what’s next? Full-Service Schools Communities and schools unite to meet the needs of the whole child. By Grace Rubenstein or every educator who has tried to play therapist, nurse, job counselor, nutritionist, and family advocate to her students while still ful⇒lling the duties of her own job— imagine a school where there’s actually a professional to ⇒ll each of those roles. That’s the goal of a growing number of communities that are creating full-service community schools, in which service agencies and schools team up to meet a whole range of children’s social, emotional, and academic needs, using the school building as a hub. With the economy stuttering and the pressure on schools to hit testing targets getting more intense, the number of school-as-service-hub sites will grow in the coming year and beyond. Even where communities don’t attempt to create complete one-stop shops, schools and service groups will increasingly join forces in smaller ways to better support kids. “The school is the receiver of everything that’s happening in the economy or society,” says Molly McCloskey, director of constituent services at the Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development (ASCD), outside Washington, DC. “The housing crisis right now—holy cow, is that playing out in schools! Different kinds of families are qualifying for free or reduced lunch, and, even worse, some families are so embarrassed about applying that their kids don’t have food.” The community-schools movement is more than twenty years HEARTS AND MINDS old, McCloskey says, but it’s seeing Learn how rural Oregon counselors give a surge in interest. It is dawning on school kids support without stigma, at social workers and educators that edutopia.org/counselors-slide-show these partnerships enable agencies to reach children where they are, and the assistance frees up teachers to teach and— ideally—students to learn. It may seem like a long leap from multiple-choice math tests to in-school social work, but as with so many things in education, the federal No Child Left Behind Act plays a role. Love it or hate it, the law has placed a national spotlight on the disparities in academic achievement between af⇓uent and poor neighborhoods—and no amount of test prep can erase the effects of poverty, ill health, and family distress on children. At Thomas Edison Elementary School, in Port Chester, New York, a pocket of poverty in wealthy Westchester County, school leaders began a decade ago forging partnerships to support students and families. As reported in the April 2008 issue of Educational Leadership, the school now hosts a health center where staff from a local medical agency provide primary care, dentistry, and nutrition counseling—essential services at a school where previously only F 23 percent of students had health insurance. Through other partnerships, students and families bene⇒t from the services of a mental health counselor and a bilingual family caseworker, plus after-school enrichment. Edison’s standardized test scores have rocketed upward, and immigrant parents once uninvolved with the school are now active in the PTA. Other communities tackle problems more piecemeal, welcoming what services they can get. Nationwide, 1,700 sites have schoolbased health centers offering care tailored to community needs, according to the National Assembly on School-Based Health Care. In rural Grants Pass, Oregon, the Southern Oregon Adolescent Study and Treatment Center began three years ago stationing staff in schools to counsel students in the course of regular school activities—avoiding the stigma of being pulled out of class for a formal counseling appointment. The local Lovejoy Hospice also has begun providing counseling in twelve schools to children with a deceased, dying, or absent parent. Nancy Livingood, Lovejoy’s manager of social services, explains that the partnership “evolved out of need—one call after another.” Public support for these hybrid operations is growing. The U.S. Department of Education, planning to give out $5 million this fall to support full-service community schools, received 480 applications for just 8 to 12 grants. Congressman Steny Hoyer of Maryland is trying to add another $200 million in annual funding to the new NCLB law. “This is about meeting the needs of kids to ensure all of our futures,” says the ASCD’s Molly McCloskey. “It’s about making sure that kids, as they become adults, are more than just little brains on a stick.” e 34 EDUTOPIA AUGUST/SEPTEMBER 2008 http://edutopia.org/counselors-slide-show
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Edutopia - August/September 2008 Edutopia Contents Up Front Feedback Dispatches Sage Advice Ask Ellen Head of Class Cool Schools Design: Building on Disaster What's Next Full-Service Schools In the Trenches Moral Aptitude Serious Gaming Behaveyourself.com Media Is the Message The Way of the Wiki A Match Made in Cyberspace Hail to the New Chief Rise of the Robots Disrupting Class As Others See Us Heart & Soul Pop Quiz: Moby Edutopia - August/September 2008 Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Edutopia (Page Cover1) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Edutopia (Page Cover2) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Contents (Page 1) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Contents (Page 2) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Contents (Page 3) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Up Front (Page 5) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Up Front (Page 6) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Feedback (Page 7) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Feedback (Page 8) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Feedback (Page 9) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Dispatches (Page 10) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Dispatches (Page 11) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Sage Advice (Page 12) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Sage Advice (Page 13) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Ask Ellen (Page 14) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Ask Ellen (Page 15) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Ask Ellen (Page 16) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page 17) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page 18) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page bindin1) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page bindin2) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page 19) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page 20) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page 21) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page 22) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page 23) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Cool Schools (Page 24) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Cool Schools (Page 25) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Cool Schools (Page 26) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Cool Schools (Page 27) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Design: Building on Disaster (Page 28) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Design: Building on Disaster (Page 29) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Design: Building on Disaster (Page 30) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Design: Building on Disaster (Page 31) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - What's Next (Page 32) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - What's Next (Page 33) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Full-Service Schools (Page 34) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - In the Trenches (Page 35) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Moral Aptitude (Page 36) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Serious Gaming (Page 37) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Behaveyourself.com (Page 38) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Behaveyourself.com (Page 39) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Media Is the Message (Page 40) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Media Is the Message (Page 41) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - The Way of the Wiki (Page 42) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - The Way of the Wiki (Page 43) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - A Match Made in Cyberspace (Page 44) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Hail to the New Chief (Page 45) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Rise of the Robots (Page 46) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Rise of the Robots (Page 47) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Disrupting Class (Page 48) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Disrupting Class (Page 49) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Disrupting Class (Page 50) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Disrupting Class (Page 51) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - As Others See Us (Page 52) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - As Others See Us (Page 53) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - As Others See Us (Page 54) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - As Others See Us (Page 55) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Heart & Soul (Page 56) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Heart & Soul (Page 57) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Heart & Soul (Page 58) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Heart & Soul (Page 59) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Pop Quiz: Moby (Page 60) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Pop Quiz: Moby (Page Cover3) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Pop Quiz: Moby (Page Cover4)
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