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哥伦布、匹兹堡及各地消息
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Biden-Harris Administration Calls on Colleges,
Universities, and Schools to Partner in Addressing K-12 Learning
Loss
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Biden-Harris Administration Calls on Colleges, Universities, and
Schools to Partner in Addressing K-12 Learning Loss, Announces
Initial Cohort of Committed Partners Today, the U.S. Department of
Education released a Dear Colleague Letter calling on colleges,
universities, and school districts to work together to use Federal
Work Study (FWS) or other resources to increase the number of
college students supporting school-aged children and youth in our
nation’s K-12 schools and out-of-school time programs.
With this call to action and as a part of its work with AmeriCorps
and Johns Hopkins University through the National Partnership for
Student Success (NPSS), the Department is pleased to announce the
first cohort of 26 early adopter colleges and universities that have
committed to using Federal Work Study or other resources to increase
the number of students working as tutors, mentors, student success
coaches, postsecondary transition coaches, and integrated student
support coordinators in other support roles.
“Our colleges and universities have always been a driving force in
solving America’s greatest challenges; and, today, we’re calling on
these critical institutions to stand up once again by using Federal
Work Study and other dollars to help accelerate learning and
recovery in our K-12 schools,” said U.S. Secretary of Education
Miguel Cardona. “I applaud the 26 colleges and universities that are
leading the way as early adopters of this effort by answering the
call and partnering with the National Partnership for Student
Success in this work. By serving as tutors and mentors, college
students can make a positive difference in the lives of children and
youth, and ultimately, it is in the best interests of our colleges
and universities to help accelerate academic recovery in our public
elementary and secondary schools. I’m hopeful that this initiative
will inspire more college students of diverse backgrounds and income
levels to consider careers as educators.”
The Department’s Dear Colleague Letter calls on colleges and
universities that receive FWS dollars to set a goal of using at
least 15 percent of their FWS funds for community service within the
next two years, and to devote any increase in the use of FWS
compensation for community service to employment in P-12 schools or
out-of-school time programs as tutors, mentors, student success
coaches, and in other NPSS roles supporting students. Colleges and
universities may also join this effort by significantly increasing
the number of college students placed in these kinds of roles,
regardless of if Federal Work Study funds are used.
The Dear Colleague Letter also encourages colleges and universities
to share data with the NPSS on the number of college students
serving in these roles, and highlights how federal funds can account
for a larger share of FWS compensation paid for these roles than
other FWS roles.
Acknowledging the staffing challenges that many schools have faced
as they work to mount high-impact tutoring and mentoring programs,
the Dear Colleague Letter encourages school and district leaders to
partner with regional colleges and universities to establish
partnerships that will enable college students to fill these student
support roles in schools and out-of-school time programs. In
addition, the letter highlights federal resources that schools and
districts can use to increase the number of individuals serving in
these roles.
“Institutions of higher education have an unprecedented opportunity
to swiftly address community learning needs and create pathways to
service by pairing federal work study with AmeriCorps funding to
establish or expand programs that place college students as tutors,
mentors, postsecondary transition coaches and other student support
roles,” said Michael D. Smith, CEO of AmeriCorps. “AmeriCorps
members and their peers in postsecondary institutions, along with
our more than 200 higher education partners that manage AmeriCorps
programs, can help lay the groundwork for closing this growing gap.
We are proud to stand with our colleagues at the U.S. Department of
Education, the National Partnership for Student Success, and those
institutions that are rising to the challenge to help our country’s
students stay on track.”
“We know the profound impact of the pandemic on K-12 students in
Baltimore. They have lost months and years of academic preparation
that will have lingering effects on their economic opportunity in
the years to come,” said Ron Daniels, the President of Johns Hopkins
University, home of the Everyone Graduates Center. “Through the
National Partnership for Student Success, our work-study students
will be able to make a measurable and meaningful difference in the
lives of future learners while also learning new skills and engaging
with our neighbors and communities. This project represents a truly
mutually beneficial opportunity for all involved. As the home of the
National Partnership for Student Success Support Hub, Johns Hopkins
University and the Everyone Graduates Center at our School of
Education are thrilled to support not only students in Baltimore
through this work, but students in schools and higher education
institutions nationwide.”
The first cohort of early adopter colleges and universities
committed to increasing the number of college students supporting
K-12 schools and students includes:
AZ - Arizona State University
DC - Howard University
MD - Johns Hopkins University
MD - Montgomery College
MI - Grand Valley State University
MI - University of Michigan
NY - New York University
NY - State University of New York (SUNY) System
Campuses: Buffalo State, Binghamton, College of Environmental
Science and Forestry, Courtland, Old Westbury, Oneonta, Onondaga
Community College, Rockland, Tompkins Cortland Community College,
Upstate, and University of Albany
OH - Rhodes State College
TN - University of Memphis
TX - Texas A&M University System
Campuses: Central Texas and Kingsville
VA - Longwood University
VA - University of Virginia
VA - Virginia Commonwealth University
VA - Virginia Tech University
The COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on our students’
learning and mental health and has widened long-standing inequities
and opportunity gaps for low-income students, students of color,
English learners, and students with disabilities. As a result of
President Biden’s historic investment of $130 billion through the
American Rescue Plan to safely reopen schools, keep them open, and
address the academic and mental health needs of students, schools
nationwide are investing in high-impact interventions, such as
tutoring and mentoring, afterschool and summer learning programs,
and school-based health services. As a result, today, many more
students are on the path to recover fully from the pandemic and
succeed in school, college, and future careers.
Despite this progress, many schools have faced challenges in finding
staff to support these critical programs. Today’s announcement
supports President Biden’s call for an additional 250,000 Americans
to support our schools and youth-serving organizations by serving as
tutors and mentors and in other high-impact roles that help address
the academic, mental health, and broader impacts of the pandemic on
school-aged children. To help meet this goal, the Biden-Harris
Administration launched the NPSS in July 2022 at an event at the
White House.
The NPSS is a research-based, locally-driven public-private
partnership between the Department, AmeriCorps, and the Everyone
Graduates Center at Johns Hopkins University that helps schools,
districts, nonprofits, and State and local governments create,
expand, and improve evidence-based programs that support the
academic recovery, mental health, and overall well-being of
students. It specifically supports increasing the number of tutors,
mentors, student success coaches, postsecondary transition coaches,
and wraparound/integrated student support coordinators providing
research-based supports to students that promote their academic
recovery and overall well-being.
We encourage additional colleges and universities to sign up to join
the Administration’s effort to increase the number of college
students serving in these roles, share their goals and progress, and
participate in a professional learning community through the NPSS
using this link: https://www.partnershipstudentsuccess.org/colleges/
. School districts are encouraged to engage with the NPSS and access
support implementing high-quality tutoring, mentoring and other
programs, including help attracting volunteers or staff or
identifying a college, university, or other partner, using this
link: https://www.partnershipstudentsuccess.org/schools-districts/.
The Dear Colleague Letter released today is posted here.
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