Center for Summer Learning at Johns Hopkins Provides
Parents Tips for
Helping Kids Avoid “Summer Slide” in Learning
School’s almost out! But parents: Don’t let your kids’
brains take a vacation.
Research shows that most students fall more than two months behind
in math over the summer, and low-income children fall behind two
months in reading while middle-income kids make slight gains. Johns
Hopkins University researchers recently found that 65 percent of
the achievement gap between poor and more advantaged children is
due to unequal summer learning experiences during elementary school
years. A recent Ohio State University study shows children also
gain as much weight during the summer as they do during the entire
school year. The problem is worse for African-American and Hispanic
kids, and for those already overweight.
“Parents always say summer is the hardest time to make sure
their kids have productive things to do,” says Ron Fairchild,
executive director of the Center for Summer Learning at Johns Hopkins
University. “Summer should be fun and memorable, but parents
shouldn’t let it be a break from learning. High-quality summer
learning opportunities are fun and engaging for kids, while keeping
them healthy, safe and on track in school.”
SUMMER LEARNING TIPS:
WHAT PARENTS CAN DO TO KEEP KIDS SHARP OVER THE SUMMER
• Locate a summer program. High-quality summer camps and programs
exist in almost every price range. Camps offered by schools, recreation
centers, universities, and community-based organizations often have
an educational or enrichment focus.
• Visit the library. Find out what interests your child and
select books on that subject. Participate in free library summer
programs and make time to read every day.
• Take educational trips. These can be low-cost visits to
parks, museums, zoos and nature centers. Plan vacations with educational
themes.
• Practice math daily. Measure items around the house or yard.
Track daily temperatures. Add and subtract at the grocery store.
Learn fractions while cooking.
• Play outside. Limit TV and video game time during summer,
just as during the school year. Intense physical activity and exercise
contribute to healthy development.
• Do good deeds. Students learn better and “act out”
less when they participate in activities that help them develop
emotionally, such as community service.
• Keep a schedule. Continue daily routines during the summer
with structure and limits. The key is providing a balance and keeping
kids engaged.
• Prepare for fall. Find out what your child will be learning
during the next school year by talking with teachers at that grade
level. Preview concepts and materials over the summer.
What Parents Should Look for in Quality Summer Programs:
• Low student-to-staff ratios.
• Positive interaction between kids and caring adults.
• High-interest, engaging activities.
• Balanced programming with daily opportunities for reading,
math, enrichment and recreation.
• A safe, structured learning environment.
Full Press Advisories can be found at the following Links:
Keeping
Kids Sharp to Avoid "Summer Slide" (Media Advisory)
Keeping
Kids Sharp to Avoid "Summer Slide" (Press Release)
Summer Learning Opportunities in Minnesota
Parents and youth will find summer learning opportunities at several
locations in their communities. Below is a list of resources available
to families across the state – please note this list is not
intended to be exhaustive but rather give examples of statewide
offerings.
• Community Education Programs (usually found through school
district websites)
• Park and Recreation Programs, which includes a variety of
sports, arts, language and enrichment opportunities (usually found
through city and county websites)
• 4-H Urban and Statewide Clubs (can be found at the University
of Minnesota Extension’s Center for 4-H and Community Youth
Development Webpage)
• Campfire USA – MN, has several programs and camps
for girls and boys
• Boys and Girls Clubs, provide a variety of programming through
the summer and school year
• YMCAs, provide programs for school age youth and older youth
• YWCAs, provides programs for school age youth and older
youth
• Science Museum of Minnesota
• Theater and Arts Programs
The Minnesota Minority Education Partnership (MMEP) has compiled
a list of summer learning opportunities. This resource is available
on their website: http://www.mmep.net/Order_form_for_Summer_Enrichment_Guide.html
AFTERSCHOOL ALLIANCE NEWS RELEASE: May
14, 2008
CONTACT: Gretchen Wright – 202/371-1999
St. Paul Mayor Christopher Coleman Honored as an Afterschool Champion
in Nation’s Capital
Parents, Educators, Students, Afterschool Leaders,
City and State Leaders Urge Congress to Reject Proposed Funding
Cut
WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Afterschool Alliance today honored
St. Paul Mayor Chris Coleman for his support for afterschool programs
at the “Breakfast of Champions,” a gala event in Washington,
D.C. Mayor Coleman was one of 17 individuals and four organizations
honored for their tireless work on behalf of afterschool programs.
He was nominated by Youth Community Connections, Minnesota’s
Statewide Afterschool Alliance.
Mayor Coleman has made afterschool programming a priority in St.
Paul. He is working to ensure that the City helps to meet families’
needs by organizing out-of-school programming and partnering with
youth programs across St. Paul. Mayor Coleman has also expanded
the public transportation system to offer free rides to young people
to afterschool programs and other locations that provide learning
opportunities.
The “Breakfast of Champions” is part of the seventh
annual Afterschool for All Challenge which brings together hundreds
of parents, educators, children, program directors and advocates
from around the country for a series of events and meetings with
Members of Congress. The 2008 Challenge is co-sponsored by the National
League of Cities and the Afterschool Alliance. Following the “Breakfast,”
the advocates fanned out across Capitol Hill for meetings with their
U.S. Senators and Representatives, and congressional staff.
“Parents, children and communities rely on afterschool programs
to keep kids safe, inspire them to learn and help working families,”
said Afterschool Alliance Executive Director Jodi Grant. “But
federal funding isn’t keeping up with the demand for afterschool,
and President Bush proposes to cut federal afterschool funding even
further. We’re in our nation’s capital this week to
honor afterschool champions and remind lawmakers that these cuts
are short-sighted and counterproductive. All kids need the opportunities
that afterschool programs provide. Bipartisan support in Congress
defeated the last proposed cut to afterschool programs, and we are
seeking bipartisan support again this year so we can counter the
President’s proposal and bring quality afterschool programs
to all children who need them.”
This year, President Bush proposed cutting the federal budget for
afterschool programs by $281 million and converting the successful
21st Century Community Learning Centers afterschool initiative (21st
CCLC) into a risky voucher system. If Congress agrees to his proposal,
300,000 students would lose access to afterschool programs.
Other state champions honored at the Afterschool for All Challenge
are: Boise Mayor David Bieter; Columbia Mayor Bob Coble; Kacy Conley,
YMCA of Central Maryland in Baltimore; Omaha Mayor Mike Fahey; Grand
Rapids Mayor George Heartwell; Savannah Mayor Otis Johnson; Morgantown
Mayor Ron Justice; U.S. Attorney Jim Letten of Louisiana; Charlotte
City Council Member James Mitchell; Missouri State Representative
Danie Moore; New York City Commissioner of the Department of Youth
and Community Development Jeanne Mullgrav; San Francisco Mayor Gavin
Newsom; Linda Robinson, Kentucky Department of Education; New Hampshire
State Senator Kathleen Sgambati; Maxine Quintana, Denver Mayor’s
Office for Education and Children; and Pennsylvania State Representative
Jake Wheatley.
The Afterschool Alliance and MetLife Foundation also presented
the first-ever MetLife Afterschool Innovator Awards at the “Breakfast
of Champions” to four organizations that have developed and
implemented innovative afterschool practices. The awardees are profiled
in Afterschool Innovations in Brief, a series of Issue Briefs developed
by the Afterschool Alliance with funding from MetLife Foundation.
They are: The After-School Corporation in New York; LA’s BEST
in California; The Native Youth Club in South Dakota; and Lincoln
Community Learning Centers in Nebraska.
The Afterschool Alliance is a nonprofit public awareness and advocacy
organization working to ensure that all children and youth have
access to quality afterschool programs. More information is available
at www.afterschoolalliance.org.
Afterschool Opportunities Summit will bring together
youth advocates, Gov. Pawlenty and business leaders to support youth
Afterschool learning opportunities are critical for the 2,000 hours of discretionary non-school time that Minnesota youth have each year.
Minneapolis, Minn. (April 29, 2008)- A collaboration of afterschool advocates, state government and public safety officials, and business leaders will meet in Saint Paul at the Amherst . H. Wilder Foundation on Monday, May 1 to discuss greater support for youth afterschool. Governor Tim Pawlenty will preside over the Governor's Afterschool Opportunities Summit whos goal is to promote and support efforts that will ensure that all children and youth have access to high quality afterschool learning opportunities. The summit calls the public and private sectors together to support quality afterschool learning opportunities. Research has shown that youth who participate in afterschool learning opportunities have better attendance, higher academic performance, and more positive attitudes about school and learning.
"It is critical that government, nonprofit and private sector resources are leveraged to help support meaningful afterschool learning opportunities for Minnesota youth," says Laura LaCroix-Dalluhn, executive director of Youth Community Connections, Minnesota's Statewide Afterschool Alliance. Youth Community Connections provides "a table" for public and private organizations that support or funds youth development through afterschool learning programs. "Afterschool learning programs also help protect investments in early childhood education and serve as a critically important element of workforce development for the state's economy."
The Governor's Aftershool Opportunities Summit highlights leading Minnesota institutions involved in afterschool, education, public safety as well as business leadership. In addition to Governor Pawlenty, speakers at the summit will include The McKnight Foundation board chairperson Erika L. Binger, University of Minnesota President Robert Bruininks, Mark.
Hugo Lopez, associate director of the Pew Hispanic Center , and Deborah Lowe Vandell of University of California, Irvine. Two key panels of local and state leaders will speak to the Call to Action and make commitments about how they can contribute to the overall goal.
Sponsors of the event include Governor Tim Pawlenty's Office, the National Governor's Association, The McKnight Foundation, the Minnesota Department of Education, the University of Minnesota, the Greater Twin Cities United Way and Youth Community Connections.
This event is not open to the public, however press access is possible. Contact Laura LaCroix-Dalluhn for event information at 612.627.0161 or laura@youthcommunityconnections.org.
Presidential Politics
as Afterschool Activity - Maria Elena Baca, Minneapolis Star
Tribune, January 23, 2008
Attention first-time voters: Anoka High School senior Anthony
Maki is planning to attend his precinct caucus on Feb. 5, and he
thinks you should, too.
On Wednesday, Maki organized and hosted a caucus primer for his
classmates that was attended by representatives of several major
candidates for president and the U.S. Senate, the League of Women
Voters, the Democratic and Republican parties and a handful of media
outlets.
About a month ago, Maki was raving to friends about the Iowa caucus.
"'Why should we care?'" he recalled one of them asking.
"'Why should anyone care?'"
Taken aback, Maki approached his teachers about organizing the
forum. "I wanted to show other youth in the Twin Cities area
that it is possible to change things in America," he said,
"and how you do that is you get out and participate."
As their classmates left for home or after-school activities, about
30 students ambled into John Belpedio's classroom. The room was
transfigured by signs bearing candidates' names. Maki opened the
forum to laughter with the deadpanned announcement that he was "officially
considering running for the high office of president of the United
States." He walked his cohorts through a PowerPoint tutorial
about the caucus process, from presidential preference to delegate
selection and from resolutions to Robert's Rules of Order.
Elwyn Tinklenberg, a DFL candidate for the Sixth District U.S.
House seat, spoke briefly to students before he was called to another
obligation. Representatives speaking for presidential hopefuls Hillary
Clinton, Barack Obama and Ron Paul and Senate candidates Mike Ciresi
and Al Franken all appeared to be in their 20s and early 30s. Several
incumbents, including Republican Sen. Norm Coleman and Sixth District
Rep. Michele Bachmann, declined to attend, as did representatives
of the major Republican presidential hopefuls.
Speaking in styles ranging from personal testimonial to a "we're
gonna win" stump speeches, each assured the students of their
importance to the electoral system and their power make a difference.
Afterward, most of the students headed out; a few hung around to
speak one to one with the representatives. Ryan Franzman, a senior
from Ramsey, said he's not planning to attend a precinct caucus
but will wait to see who the front-runners are. "I'll be able
to make a better decision," he said. His classmate Paul Foss
disagreed. "I want to have some say into who is nominated,"
he said, "Better than leaving it to chance and voting for whoever
ends up there."
How to reach young voters
Juniors Laura Lee and Katie Elsberry, both of Ramsey, attended
the forum, even though they can't vote in November.
"I really like to stay on top of political issues," Lee
said. "We can still go to the caucuses, we can still encourage
our eligible classmates to vote."
Students also weighed in on the representatives' and their candidates'
approaches to the campaign. How should candidates communicate with
young voters?
"I think allowing young voters to form their own opinions
and giving them the information without a bias, allowing them to
make their own opinions without being preached to is important,"
said Elsberry.
David Sparer, a senior from Andover, agreed. "I like to know
what they stand for," he said. "Personal testimonials
are good, but they only go so far. I think it's just needing to
know what the candidate wants to do and what they stand for. Just
like voters of any age, he said, "we need to know what we're
going to get out of a candidate."
Landfall Named One of the 100 Best Communities
POSTED on MPR AT 2:29 p.m. on January 24, 2008, by Bob Collins
Generally speaking, people who don't live there don't have a lot of
fabulous things to say about Landfall once they get past "affordable."
That's the way it is with mobile home communities. Landfall is tucked
away on the Maplewood-Oakdale border along I-94, passed every day
by thousands of people who don't much give a sniff about the "town"
of 52 acres and 735 people with a per capita income of a little over
$15,000 on the shores of Tanner's Lake. In the '90s a developer wanted
to turn the town into a shopping mall.
Today, however, the community was named "one of 100 best communities
for young people," by America's Promise Alliance, the group formed
by Colin and Alma Powell.
It would be easy to diminish the award's merit by pointing out that
it's really not one of the 100 best of all the communities in the
country. It's actually one of the 100 best of the 750 who applied
to be honored, and one of five winners in Minnesota out of 18 communities
that applied . If you tell the average East Metro person Landfall
earned the distinction, the chances are good they'll look at you funny
and say, "the trailer park?"
Here's what they don't know: Landfall is doing more than a lot of
communities when it comes to helping its kids.
Back in the '90s, a Stillwater agency -- FamilyMeans -- found that
lack of youth activities was a primary concern in the town. With initial
funding from the McKnight Foundation, organizer Tom Yuska and others
created Investigation Station, which provides programs for kids 5
to 12, such as arts, music, computers and cooking. School buses drop
the kids off after school, and they can stay until evening at no cost.
At night, a teen center operates for kids, 13 to 18, according to
an article last month in the Oakdale-Lake Elmo Review.
Landfall's award, given today at a ceremony in Washington, is based
not only on the programs, but also on efforts to improve graduation
rates and lower substance abuse rates. "It isn't so much a comparison
of one year to the next," according to Danielle Butler, who administers
the award program for America's Promise Alliance. "We're mostly
interested in making sure they have the data and are taking steps
to improve." "Teens in Landfall were reluctant
to tell their friends they lived in Landfall," Yuska said this
afternoon, "and now they're inviting their friends."
Things aren't all rosy. "I do know the graduation rate for last
year's teens was not very good," he said. "On the other
hand, 96 percent of our K-5 group is making 'adequate yearly progress'
and we are doing things for older kids. One of the programs we started
last year is aimed at middle school kids, especially children of color,
to get them thinking about careers and what they want to do in the
future. Our program coordinator just took a small group of them on
their first college tour and one of the girls who just started high
school is asking for help picking out classes that will help her down
the road. She wants to be a scientist."
Four other Minnesota communities were similarly honored. St. Louis
Park, Mankato-North Mankato, Northfield, and Saint Paul.
Youth Day at the Capitol
Thursday, March 1, 2007 was Youth Day at the Capitol. Over 400
young people and adults braved the winter blizzard and attended
the event! Young people performed in the Capitol Rotunda, while
their peers danced and led chants about their value to their families,
communities and the State! Hundreds of young people and adults met
with their legislators to talk about why afterschool and youth programming
matters to them.
The Star Tribune of Minneapolis reported on the event. Click here
to view the full article, titled Lobbying
with a hip-hop beat.
The All Youth Deserve A Chance capitol rally is sponsored
by youth-serving organizations, including Youth Community Connections,
Lutheran Social Service of Minnesota, Mentoring Partnership of Minnesota,
Minnesota Alliance With Youth, Minnesota Workforce Council Association,
Minnesota Youth Intervention Programs Association, Minnesota Youth
Service Association, Stand Up For Kids, Streetworks, and Youth Policy
Alliance.
SMILES Holds Meeting To Prevent Kids From Slipping Through the Cracks
SMILES Center for Independent Living led a Community Dialogue sponsored
by Youth Community Connections this week in Mankato, MN. During
this informational meeting youth service providers communicated
the importance of keeping kids on track, getting them involved in
local organizations and keeping them in activities when school is
not in session. Look at what's happening in Mankato as far as youth
development in out of school time and then look at where the holes
are and how we can work to fill them, fill in the gaps that might
be existing.
If you’d like to see their local news coverage click on Watch
the Video.
Calender
of Events
Youth Community Connections named for St. Paul's Mayor Chris Coleman's
2nd Shift Commission.
Press
Release
University of Minnesota 's Commission on Out-of-School Time releases
report.
Press
Release
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