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Overview Briefing Mary-Anne Schmitt-Carey President, Say Yes To Education, Inc.

City-wide Turnaround: A Powerful Public-Private Collaboration for College and Career Readiness at Scale. Overview Briefing Mary-Anne Schmitt-Carey President, Say Yes To Education, Inc. Approaching 25 Years: Cohort R&D to City-wide Strategy. Results from Say Yes (1987 – Present).

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Overview Briefing Mary-Anne Schmitt-Carey President, Say Yes To Education, Inc.

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  1. City-wide Turnaround: A Powerful Public-Private Collaboration for College and Career Readiness at Scale Overview Briefing Mary-Anne Schmitt-Carey President, Say Yes To Education, Inc.

  2. Approaching 25 Years:Cohort R&D to City-wide Strategy

  3. Results from Say Yes (1987 – Present) Philadelphia, Hartford, Cambridge Students in Say Yes Chapters have demonstrated significantly better high school graduation rates than the national average for students from comparable demographics. • More than 75 percent graduated from high school • Additionally, over 50 percent of all participating students achieved a postsecondary degree at 140 different higher education institutions When students begin to receive supports in 3rd grade (Cambridge), the results are even more remarkable. • Almost 90 percent of students completed a high school degree (including GED) • More than 72 percent of the cohort completed a postsecondary degree program • Half these students receiving a four-year bachelors (BA or BS) degree

  4. Results from Hartford, CT Say Yes First Cohort in Hartford High school graduation/GED = 87% Completed Postsecondary = 72%

  5. Collective Impact “Collective impact initiatives differ from other types of collaborative ventures in that they involve a centralized infrastructure, a dedicated staff, and a structured process that leads to a common agenda, shared measurement, continuous communication, and mutually reinforcing activities among all participants.” – John Kania and Mark Kramer, Managing directors, FSG Stanford Social Innovation Review. * In Syracuse, Say Yes’ Collective Impact initiative is housed and supported by key leadership at Syracuse University

  6. Building a Say Yes School

  7. Building the Say Yes City

  8. What Scale Looks Like: THE COOPER UNION More than 100 Colleges Provide Tuition Guarantees

  9. What Tuition Supports Mean to Young People The Promise • Belief that college is possible for all • Incentive to do well in school • Reduced financial burden on families • Opportunity to go to 2-year or 4-year institutions The Results • Over $11 million in private and public scholarships supports were awarded to the graduating classes of 2009 and 2010 • Students are now attending over 60 different Say Yes Higher Education Compact institutions

  10. What Say Yes Means to Communities Economic Development • Enrollment in SCSD has increased (for the first time in a decade) by 300 students, which equates to about $4 million in increased state aid • Home values have risen in Syracuse by 3.5% • City, County, and Regional Officials are marketing Syracuse as the “First Say Yes City In America” • Seven percent reduction in overall crime city-wide (2010-2011) • Over $43 million dollars has been raised, during the worst economic downturn of a generation, to support this comprehensive and unprecedented effort

  11. What Scale Looks Like Wrap-around Service Integration and Coordination w/in Public Schools • Service coordinators in every school managing a Student Monitoring and Intervention System (SMIS) • Comprehensive volunteer recruitment, training, and deployment system (360 tutors and mentors) • School-district-to-county data exchange to improve health and social service supports • County-funded family services partnership to provide rapid referral and support services within public schools (Huntington Family Services) • Comprehensive due diligence of local youth-serving CBOs and aligned, long-term partnerships with quality providers (40 reviewed; 10 partnerships) • Seven fully-staffed legal clinics offering pro-bono advice, service, and referrals • Social worker-to-student ratios of 1:200; county-supported professional development for all

  12. What Scale Looks Like School Improvement at Scale • AIR Expert reviews and school improvement planning assistance (32 Schools) • Introduction of new teacher evaluation and support systems (developed collaboratively with the union) • Longitudinal evaluation of progress and outcomes and transparent data and continuous improvement systems • Extended Learning Programs • After school enrichment • Summer Camp

  13. What Scale Looks Like College and Career Readiness • Research-based academic and talent development programming across all schools (K-6) in both after-school and summer programming • Delivered hands-on learning experiences culminating in student demonstrations of work at well-attended, public events • Universal access to scholarships at 100 campuses, including 25 private institutions • City-wide structured mentoring and internship program • Revamped high-school curriculum and college access counseling systems

  14. What Scale Looks Like Early Student Results in Syracuse, NY • The number of 9th grade students who dropped out, were incarcerated or otherwise left the school district decreased by 44% between 2009 and 2010 • Attendance is high • Teachers perceive improvement in the academic supports at their schools • Say Yes Summer Success Academy Scholars at OCC passed developmental courses at a higher rate than their peers, a promising indicator for college retention • MAT (math) 68.4% passed vs. 56.1% college passing rate • ENG (writing) 88% passed vs. 73.6% college passing rate • RDG (reading)88% passed vs. 78.3% college passing rate • 9th Grade Algebra Regents Exam Passing Rate up by over 30 percent

  15. The Cost of Say Yes • Average of $3,200/student • Broad range of public and private investors • Private colleges invest with civic support for last-dollar scholarships • Say Yes provides upfront resources that leads to long-term sustainability in community Investment in Syracuse Initiative • Over $43 million in support for initiative brought to Syracuse, including $8 million raised toward an endowment to pay for public colleges • Long-term reallocation of district, county, and city funding to support coordinated programming at scale

  16. Say Yes Expansion Syracuse has said yes to Say Yes to Education for its 21,000 students. We know this city-wide approach is needed in other communities Say Yes to Education launched in Buffalo, NY on December 20th, 2011 and will begin program implementation for 48,000 students in Fall, 2012.

  17. A National Strategy for College and Career Success It offers: • A catalytic approach to educational and economic success that transforms the way government agencies work together and creates a role for every sector in driving college and career success • A unique public-private partnership that includes higher education as “anchor” institutions to leverage additional private resources and expand the pipeline of receptive and supportive colleges/universities for first generation college enrollees • A systematic approach to improvement that can be scaled up city-by-city • A coherent urban agenda focused on building a strong workforce, combating poverty, and investing in people

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