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Real Students, Real Teachers, Real Communities

Back to School, Forward to Communities

7/31/2017

 
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The Nations, Nashville, TN
When you see a community struggling to meet the needs of its school children and the fight to provide resources seems ineffective or misguided, is there an answer? We think so. Implemented with a deep community buy-in, a proven national strategy, a salaried school-level coordinator and a local stakeholder community board, public school communities can take ownership of their schools. The community starts with a set of results they want to achieve, and target their answer based on the resources in the community. The solution exists within the community itself guided by a deep needs assessment of the school. This is a Transformational Community School Model.

Tennessee AROS set out this year to raise the Community Schools IQ across the state. Lead by a coalition of Tennessee non-profits rooted in public school advocacy, SOCM, SPEAK, TEA, TnPTA and TREE they outlined goals for the first part of 2017. Below is a report with an informal Community Schools state audit that tries to connect the dots around some amazing Community Schools efforts across Tennessee, seen through TennAROS goals. With hope, we can continue to break down communication silos between community schools efforts and come together to help our State Department of Education see Transformational Community Schools as a successful, evidence-based approach to school improvement. Download the REPORT BELOW.
aros_report-final_exec_spring_2017.pdf
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The AROS framework collaboratively aligns with the Coalition for Community Schools Standards. 
http://www.communityschools.org/assets/1/Page/Community-School%20Standards-Updatesd2017.pdf

TennAROS available to talk to your school boards, advocacy groups, alderman, city council, church, or other local civic groups to help explain the unique, evidence-based framework AROS advocates for, why we need community schools and how your community might go about creating them or improving the efforts you have already through non-profit partners or FRC's. This solution is community lead. Let us help you get started. Email lynhoyt@tennaros.org

Community Schools, Bringing Evidence To Local Education Solutions

7/7/2017

 
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A Community School is a public school – the hub of its neighborhood, uniting families, educators and community partners to provide all students with top-quality academics, enrichment, health and social services, and opportunities to succeed in school and in life. 

Community schools are the kind of public schools that families want and children deserve.

A "Transformational Community School" is a school that starts with a set of results they want to achieve. And they organize the community around agreed-upon results and identify the resources to achieve them. This transformational organizing is guided with deep community buy-in, a proven national strategy, a salaried school-level coordinator and a local stakeholder board.
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​A Community School is not a new idea. They exist everywhere the community provides student-centered supports:
  • Where students are safe, loved, and challenged;
  • Where families and educators partner with doctors, nurses, social workers, community agencies, businesses, higher education, and others to provide the comprehensive academic and non-academic supports that meet each student’s unique needs and taps his/her unique talents. Counseling and health care for some. Food and shelter for others. GED and job training for community residents. Quality instruction, enrichment, and extracurriculars for all;
  • Where schools are open 24/7: early mornings, late afternoons, nights, weekends, and during the summer;
  • Where teachers are given the time and space to help students master the more challenging academics they need to thrive in an increasingly complex world;
  • Where educators work with local companies, nonprofits, higher education, and local governments to offer students engaging, real-world projects that make learning more relevant, and open the door to future opportunities;
  • Where students have a voice in what their school looks like; where families are respected and engaged; where neighbors gather; where the wisdom and assets of the community are respected; and where students, families, neighbors, and community partners work with school staff to shape the school’s priorities.

Instead of fragmenting neighborhoods, these hyper-local schools unify them. Instead of inventing another “silver bullet,” community schools offer a proven approach that’s rooted in our democratic values and retooled for the 21st-century, with neighbors helping neighbors, and schools serving as the hub of their communities.

Community schools, 7,500 and growing, represent a national movement with a multi-decade track record of improving achievement, empowering students and families, and strengthening neighborhoods. They are flourishing in a growing number of cities, suburbs, and rural America, in regular public schools and public charter schools. Community schools offer an approach that builds on core American values to meet 21st-century needs. They are more relevant than ever. 
Community Schools are appropriate ESSA intervention strategy for school improvement. Any school can be a community school.

How Can You Start a Community School?
Many districts and school leaders in Tennessee already have components of a community school already in place. If you are ready to leverage and expand that effort, start below with the Coalition of Community Schools Overview and Guide. They provide resources and tools will help you design and implement community schools at the school-site level.  These resources are divided into several interconnected steps that will help you get started. Many of the resources in this toolkit originate from community schools initiatives around  the country that have been working on developing community schools for many years.

Community Schools Overview 
Here are resources that provide an overview of the community school strategy:
  • What is a Community School? Learn more about community schools from our webpage, watch the new community schools video, and use the one page document to help you make the case.
  • A Rationale and Results Framework for Community Schools
  • Stages of Development as a Community School (Children’s Aid Society; SUN Community Schools)
  • Building a Community School (Children’s Aid Society)
Starting a Community School: Tools to Guide Vision and Strategic Plan
Building a Leadership Team
Needs and Capacity Assessments
Sharing Space and Facilities
Financing your Community School
Research and Evaluation for Continuous Improvement

READ MORE on the Coalition for Community Schools website: 
 
​Still need more evidence? To read the brief click here.

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Tennessee AROS   •   Community is Everything

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