Collective Impact Case Study: The Road Map Project

Education and Literacy

Collective Impact Case Study: The Road Map Project

The Road Map Project seeks to double the number of students on track to graduate with a postsecondary degree or career credential in the South Seattle and South King County, Wash., region by 2020, as well as to close achievement gaps. It will do this by driving a dramatic improvement in student achievement from "cradle to career" in South Seattle and South King County. The project builds on the belief that collective effort is necessary to make large-scale change and has created a common goal and shared vision in order to facilitate coordinated action, both inside and outside schools.

August 1970

Geographic Focus: North America / United States (Western) / Washington / King County

Parents' Attitudes on the Quality of Education in the United States

Education and Literacy;Parenting and Families

Parents' Attitudes on the Quality of Education in the United States

Between America's long-standing national objective of improving the strength of the public school system to prepare students for college and careers and the focus of the Obama administration on education as a pathway to economic security for the middle class and improving the economy, education issues and policy are in the spotlight. A central focus of the policy discussion is the measurement of quality and the utilization of quality data to improve student outcomes. This quality-focused policy agenda covers a range of high-profile issues, from standardized testing to teacher evaluation to early childhood education, and involves a range of stakeholders.

While regular survey research is conducted with a variety of stakeholders, including teachers, very few nationally representative surveys of parents have been conducted recently. Often cited as a key determinant of student outcomes, parents represent an important perspective that policymakers need to understand in the design, articulation, and implementation of quality-focused education initiatives.

This study provides a comprehensive description of parents' perspectives on education in America today, with a specific focus on understanding what quality education and teaching means to parents and how it should be measured and rewarded.

With funding from the Joyce Foundation, the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research conducted a national survey of 1,025 parents or guardians of children who completed a grade between kindergarten and 12th during the 2012-2013 school year.

August 1970

Geographic Focus: North America / United States

Patching the Pipeline: Addressing Teacher Satisfaction and Retention in Duval County

Education and Literacy, Employment and Labor

Patching the Pipeline: Addressing Teacher Satisfaction and Retention in Duval County

In "Patching the Pipeline: Addressing Teacher Satisfaction and Retention in Duval County," the Jacksonville Public Education Fund provides a comprehensive look at the last five cohorts of new teachers in Duval County Public Schools, and conducts a survey of all teachers in the district to get their opinions about a wide variety of different factors.

This report details the turnover among new teachers in Duval County Public Schools -- half leave in the first five years -- and raises the voices of teachers themselves about what factors keep them in the classroom.

August 1970

Geographic Focus: North America-United States (Southern)-Florida-Duval County

Building Expectations, Delivering Results: Asset-Based Financial Aid and the Future of Higher Education

Children and Youth;Education and Literacy

Building Expectations, Delivering Results: Asset-Based Financial Aid and the Future of Higher Education

American society reflects considerable class immobility, much of which is due to the wide gap in college completion rates between advantaged and disadvantaged groups of students. This report discusses the factors that cause unequal college completion rates and introduces assets as an explanation stratification scholars often ignore. The following chapters are included in this report:

    • From a Debt-Dependent to an Asset-Based Financial Aid Model
    • Institutional Facilitation and CSA (Child Savings Account) Effects
    • CSAs as an Early Commitment Financial Aid Strategy
    • From Disadvantaged Students to College Graduates: The Role of CSAs
    • How CSAs Facilitate Saving and Asset Accumulation
    • Policy Discussion

August 1970

Geographic Focus: North America / United States

Markers that Matter: Success Indicators in Early Learning and Education

Children and Youth, Education and Literacy

Markers that Matter: Success Indicators in Early Learning and Education

This new report developed by FSG with support from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, distills a set of 48 early childhood indicators that reflect healthy development of young children. The report also highlights 10 emerging themes, areas that are not sufficiently addressed by existing indicators and where further inquiry is needed.

August 1970

Geographic Focus: North America-United States

Strengthening Assessments of School Climate: Lessons from the NYC School Survey

Children and Youth, Education and Literacy

Strengthening Assessments of School Climate: Lessons from the NYC School Survey

A growing number of cities and states are using surveys to collect vital information about school climate from students, teachers and parents. The New York City Department of Education's (DOE) annual survey of parents, students, and teachers is the largest of its kind in the United States.

Since 2010, the Research Alliance has been working with the DOE to assess the reliability and validity of the survey's measures.

Our new brief, "Strengthening Assessments of School Climate", summarizes our findings and recommendations to date. It also presents a set of broader lessons that have emerged from our work, which can provide guidance to others that are implementing school survey efforts. In addition, it includes a Policymaker Perspective, authored by Lauren Sypek, the DOE's School Survey Director, reflecting on the process of collaborating to improve the School Survey as well as some of the changes that have been made to the survey as a result of this partnership.

August 1970

Geographic Focus: North America-United States (New York Metropolitan Area)

Afterschool in Action: Innovative Afterschool Programs Supporting Middle School Youth

Arts and Culture;Education and Literacy;Parenting and Families

Afterschool in Action: Innovative Afterschool Programs Supporting Middle School Youth

This report, released by Afterschool Alliance in partnership with MetLife Foundation, highlights the work of quality afterschool programs that support children, families and communities across the nation.

This compendium is a compilation of four issue briefs examining critical issues facing middle school youth and the vital role afterschool programs play in addressing these issues. This series explores afterschool and: arts enrichment, parent engagement, school improvement and digital learning. The compendium also includes in-depth profiles of the 2012 Afterschool Innovator Award winners, as well as highlights from 2008-2011 award winners.

The 2012 MetLife Foundation Afterschool Award winners are:

  • The Wooden Floor, Santa Ana, CA
  • Latino Arts Strings & Mariachi Juvenil, Milwaukee, WI
  • Kid Power Inc., The VeggieTime Project, Washington, D.C.
  • Parma Learning Center, Parma, ID
  • Green Energy Technologies in the City, Lansing, MI

August 1970

Geographic Focus: North America / United States (Midwestern) / Wisconsin / Milwaukee County / Milwaukee;North America / United States (Southern) / District of Columbia / Washington;North America / United States (Midwestern) / Michigan / Ingham County / Lansing;North America / United States (Western) / California / Orange County / Santa Ana;North America / United States (Western) / Idaho / Canyon County / Parma

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