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STUDENT SUCCESS DRIVER 2: Personalization and Pathways for Student Success WHY EXPANDED LEARNING?

STUDENT SUCCESS DRIVER 2: Personalization and Pathways for Student Success WHY EXPANDED LEARNING?. Personalization and Pathways for Student Success. Focus on whole child Experimental and collaborative learning Relevance Real world Socio-economic factors do not affect student outcomes.

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STUDENT SUCCESS DRIVER 2: Personalization and Pathways for Student Success WHY EXPANDED LEARNING?

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  1. STUDENT SUCCESS DRIVER 2: Personalization and Pathways for Student SuccessWHY EXPANDED LEARNING?

  2. Personalization and Pathways for Student Success • Focus on whole child • Experimental and collaborative learning • Relevance • Real world • Socio-economic factors do not affect student outcomes

  3. Panelist • Rocio Abundis-Rodriguez, Director ASAPconnect • Sarah Reyes, Division Director, Youth and Family Development Division, Catholic Charities • Emiliano Valdez, After School Program Manager, Youth Alliance

  4. Santa Clara County • 184 Elementary • 17 Middle School Sites • 6 High School Sites

  5. Why Summer Matters

  6. ASAPconnect’s Role • Capacity Building • Train Technical Assistance providers • Comprehensive Assessment of Summer Programs (CASP) – Assessor Training • Customized coaching • Broker resources • Resource Development • Online access for ALL TA Providers ASAPconnect

  7. Catholic Charities of Santa Clara County Children, Youth, and Family Development Division Sara Reyes, Division Director

  8. School Aged CORAL Communities Organizing Resources to Advance Learning Serving over 2000 students after school TK to 8th grade. 3 Core CORAL Components: Literacy, Homework and Enrichment • 95% of parents surveyed agree that CORAL has helped their child do better in school, 97% agree that CORAL staff care about their child (2013 survey of 442 CORAL TK and Kinder parents). • 95.7% of CORAL youth surveyed report that the activities in CORAL are fun, 81.7% feel safe at CORAL, 81% feel that CORAL staff care about them (Fall 2012 - 1,252 students). • CORAL participants have twice the growth rate in proficiency accumulation than non-CORAL kids. 4070 students (Department of Economics, University of Notre Dame 2012)

  9. Changing lives for good.

  10. EmilianoValdez, After School Program Manager, Youth Alliance • Power School • Eliot Elementary School • South Valley Middle School • Rod Kelley School • Glen View Elementary School

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