1 / 0

The Kalamazoo Promise: Building Assets for Community Change

The Kalamazoo Promise: Building Assets for Community Change. Michelle Miller-Adams, Research Fellow W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research March 2014. What is the Kalamazoo Promise?. Announced November 2005, to continue in perpetuity Funded by anonymous private donors

verda
Download Presentation

The Kalamazoo Promise: Building Assets for Community Change

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Kalamazoo Promise: Building Assets for Community Change

    Michelle Miller-Adams, Research Fellow W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research March 2014
  2. What is the Kalamazoo Promise? Announced November 2005, to continue in perpetuity Funded by anonymous private donors First-dollar program (before other financial aid) Place-based: Kalamazoo Public Schools Covers 65–100% of tuition and fees at any in-state, public post-secondary institution for KPS graduates Minimum 4-year residency and enrollment requirement Universal: every graduate is eligible Students have 10 years in which to use funding
  3. Promise programs seek to change the culture of a community, not simply award scholarships. They are: Place-based – focus on a geographically bounded community Universal or near-universal – everyone has a stake; broad buy-in throughout the community Long-term – allow time for people to make choices based on the program’s benefits What makes Promise programs potential tools for community transformation?
  4. The Promise movement takes off . . . Since the Kalamazoo Promise was announced, more than 35 communities have created Promise programs, with others in the planning stage. Annual PromiseNet conferences draw representatives from 50+ communities. Promise programs exist in all parts of the United States, in communities of varying sizes and types.
  5. Promise Scholarship Programs (as of 2013) Bay Commitment Syracuse Say Yes to Education LaCrosse Promise Northport Promise Saginaw Promise Lansing Promise Baldwin Promise Pontiac Promise Kalamazoo Promise New Haven Promise Detroit Scholarship Benton Harbor Promise Pittsburgh Promise Jackson Legacy College Bound Garrett County San Francisco Promise Denver Scholarship Foundation Peoria Promise Hopkinsville Rotary Scholars Ventura Promise Arkadelphia Promise Great River Promise Promise for the Future Sparkman Promise Leopard Challenge El Dorado Promise Pensacola Pledge Scholars
  6. Promise programs are not all alike . . . Models vary by: Student eligibility Universal (all graduates eligible) or minimum GPA (usually 2.5) and/or attendance requirement Eligible post-secondary institutions Local, in-state public, or any institution (with tuition cap) 2-year only, 4-year included Public or private (with tuition cap) Level of student support services provided Investment in Future Centers in high schools Funding Private (businesses, individuals); philanthropic; public (tax resources)
  7. How Promise programs work Scholarship program serves as a catalyst Changes incentives for many types of actors Students, teachers, parents, businesses, residents, realtors, other school districts, etc. Leads to creation and/or growth of human, social, and economic capital for individuals, the city, and the region... ... IF the community is aligned. “There’s the money, and then there’s everything else.” Dr. Janice Brown, Kalamazoo Promise
  8. Potential Outcomes: Human Capital Creation of college-going culture in K-12 system Reduced high school dropout and increased graduation rates Narrowing of college attendance gap by income and race Increased college attendance & completion rate Narrowing of K-12 achievement gap Creation of better-educated local workforce Key Challenge: Ensuring that all students are sufficiently prepared to make use of their scholarships
  9. Potential Outcomes: Social Capital Boost to community morale, sense of identity Mobilization of multiple actors around education and economic development Increased volunteer activity in schools, new tutoring/mentoring programs New philanthropic resources Greater social cohesion due to better-educated residents Key Challenges: Coordinating and paying for support services Aligning multiple efforts around a common goal
  10. Potential Outcomes: Economic Assets New financial resources for school districts Freed-up savings for families Higher national profile (awards, media coverage, etc.) Alignment of organizations around education as engine of economic development Stronger housing market & rising property values New business investment Population growth leading to revitalized urban core Key Challenges: Leveraging new business investment; overcoming stagnant economic climate
  11. State of Michigan Comparison
  12. Similar School District Comparison
  13. Initial Impact on Students Higher student achievement Bartik and Lachowska (2013) – increase in probability of earning credits, decrease in number of days suspended, increased GPA for African-American students Strengthening of college-going culture Tripling of Advanced Placement enrollments (2007–11) Pronounced gains among low-income and minority students Emergence of new student support programs Early literacy, family literacy, tutoring , mentoring, credit recovery The Learning Network of Greater Kalamazoo Shift in post-secondary choices Four institutions receive 84% of Promise students 63% go to local institutions, 21% go to flagship schools (U-M, MSU)
  14. Use of Kalamazoo Promise Scholarship For first eight classes of Promise-eligible graduates: 3,236 students used scholarship (84% of those eligible) Approximately $50 million paid out in scholarship funds (first dollar) 93% of Promise-eligible students attempt college Percentage of use by ethnicity African-American 83% Hispanic 81% Caucasian 85% Positive outcomes vary across type of institution (Class of 2006) Students at 4-year institutions: 82% retention/completion Students at 2-year institutions: 37% retention/completion Met academic requirements (2.0 GPA & completion of 75% of credits attempted) 84% university v. 61% community college (Fall 2013)
  15. Initial Impact on Local Economy Economic impact has been constrained by weak state and regional economy Indirect economic benefits Students relocating to/remaining in district New financial resources for school district Local use of scholarships School construction – first new buildings in 40 years Higher national profile (awards, media coverage, etc.) Alignment of organizations around education as engine of economic development
  16. Lessons Learned The Kalamazoo Promise has been shown to: Create incentives for college-going and help build a college-going culture in the K-12 system. Have positive effects on academic performance and behavior. Support community alignment around education. Challenge K-12 schools to adequately prepare students for college success. Challenge community college around progression and completion. Challenge broader community to address barriers that prevent academic success in low-income youth.
  17. Additional Resources Questions or comments: Michelle Miller-Adams, miller-adams@upjohn.org The Promise of Kalamazoo blog PromiseNet conference PromiseNet 2013 W.E. Upjohn Institute Kalamazoo Promise Research
More Related