The working group on universities and dropout research met at Baruch College on January 24. Participants included representatives from United Way NYC, the Community Service Society, the Liberty Partnership Program, CUNY’s College Now, Baruch College, the Neighborhood Family Services Coalition, Sports and Arts in the Schools Foundation, the Society for Equitable Excellence, Queens College Equity Center, and Directions for Our Youth.
_______________________________________________ResourcesFrom your perspective, what resources are necessary for a substantial improvement in the dropout rate?- Need for data on dropouts and at risk students by specific schools and characteristics.
- Massive expansion of guidance services and resources for dropout prevention training and materials.
- Expansion of link between CUNY colleges and at risk students/struggling schools.
- Enhancement of school curriculum (cultural sensitivity) and extra-curricular opportunities.
- Expansion of high school internship programs like In School Youth operated by DYCD.
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_______________________________________________ProceduresWhat procedures need to be changed in order to significantly impact potential dropouts?- Parental/family involvement needs to be the core of any dropout prevention strategy.
- Schools need to be viewed/re-designed as centers of academic, emotional, social and physical well-being.
- High School to college transition, middle school to high school transition, needs special attention and reform.
- School leadership teams need to be reinvigorated and tasked with dropout prevention planning.
- School report cards should integrate parents’ evaluations and community-based organizations’ evaluations of the schools linkages to the immediate geographic community.
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_______________________________________________PoliciesWhat policies do you think the school and the government need to adopt to curb the dropout rate?- Need a uniform language for and way of measuring dropout epidemic.
- Dropout epidemic must be attacked like any other public health campaign with ads, slogans, editorials, letters to the editor, etc. Need to involve corporate leaders, communication professionals along with policy analysts, elected and government officials, educators and those directly impacted.
- Post Parents Bill of Rights at the entrance to school buildings to signal respect for the paramount role played by parents in school success.
- Change compulsory school laws at both ends: mandate kindergarten or pre-K and raise the compulsory attendance age to 18.
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_______________________________________________Training/Professional DevelopmentWhat professional training is necessary to prepare school personnel to curb the dropout rate and create a climate of mutual respect in the school?- Workshops for parents on the severe impact of dropping out of school, a nearly $10,000 a year economic loss measured against those who graduate high school.
- Workshops for school-based personnel – teachers, principals, guidance staff to transform them into agents of dropout prevention.
- Publication of dropout prevention handbooks or guides for families and schools.
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