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Meryle Weinstein; Sarah A. Cordes; Christopher Rick; Amy Ellen Schwartz – Urban Education, 2024
While the yellow school bus is emblematic of American education, there is variation in bus service across the country. Millions of students rely on the bus, making transportation an essential part of a student's educational experience. Thus, equity in transportation access is a key component of educational equity. Using national district-level…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Geographic Location, Educational Resources, Student Transportation
MDRC, 2020
The skills and abilities children develop in their earliest years lay the foundation for their future well-being. Likewise, early negative experiences can undermine them in later life. Parents play a central role in shaping their children's development, so helping them overcome their own sources of stress is a powerful way to improve how families…
Descriptors: Research Needs, Home Visits, Integrated Services, Young Children
Quartz, Karen Hunter; Daniel, Julia; Maier, Anna – American Educator, 2020
This article shares the experience of three teachers, who teach and learn at thriving community schools in San Francisco, New York, and Los Angeles. Their experiences challenge traditional ideas about what it means to learn and be a teacher. In their schools, teaching is a community effort where all the adults--teachers, social workers, parents,…
Descriptors: Community Schools, Social Justice, Educational Change, Integrated Services
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Báez, Johanna Creswell; Renshaw, Kristen J.; Bachman, Lauren E. M.; Kim, David; Smith, Veronica D.; Stafford, Rose E. – Children & Schools, 2019
Community schools provide integrated services and supports, often through partnerships with community-based organizations, to mediate health and psychosocial barriers to learning faced by children from low-income families. Wediko Children's Services conducted a program evaluation with over 500 students at two schools in low-income communities in…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Competence, Rating Scales, Trauma, Health Services
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Maier, Anna; Daniel, Julia; Oakes, Jeannie – Learning Policy Institute, 2017
The report on which this brief is based synthesizes the research evidence about the impact of community schools on student and school outcomes. Its aim is to support and inform school, community, district, and state leaders as they consider, propose, or implement community schools as a strategy for providing equitable, high-quality education to…
Descriptors: Community Schools, Educational Improvement, Outcomes of Education, Integrated Services
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McShane, Michael Q. – Education Next, 2019
Communities in Schools is one of the nation's oldest and largest providers of integrated student supports, also known as "wraparound services." Started in New York City in the 1970s, the agency now works with more than 2,300 schools in 25 states and the District of Columbia. The model is straightforward: Communities in Schools recruits,…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Student Improvement, Achievement Gains, Charter Schools
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Kerr, Kirstin; Dyson, Alan – International Journal for Research on Extended Education, 2014
The Harlem Children's Zone (HCZ) is arguably one of the most extensive extended education approaches established to date. It has sought to create a seamless programme of support for children living in Harlem, from birth to early adulthood, in family, school and community settings. The evidence on HCZ's impacts is limited, but its approach…
Descriptors: Urban Education, Urban Schools, Family Programs, Community Programs
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Dryfoos, Joy G. – Educational Leadership, 1996
Full-service schools aim to provide both quality education and support services (health, welfare, recreation, and life-enhancing programs). Two middle-school programs in New York City and Modesto, California, are profiled. Despite barriers to success (governance and turf issues, lack of continuity, public controversy, and funding), full-service…
Descriptors: Cooperative Programs, Elementary Secondary Education, Health Services, Integrated Services
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Howe, Judith L.; Sherman, Deborah Witt – Gerontology & Geriatrics Education, 2006
Despite the increasing public demand for enhanced care of older patients and those with life-threatening illness, health professionals have had limited formal education in geriatrics and palliative care. Furthermore, formal education in interdisciplinary team training is limited. In order to remedy this situation, proactive interventions are being…
Descriptors: Educational Strategies, Terminal Illness, Team Training, Geriatrics
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Albert, David A.; McManus, Joseph M.; Mitchell, Dennis A. – Journal of School Health, 2005
School-based health centers (SBHCs) often are located in high-need schools and communities. Dental service is frequently an addition to existing comprehensive services, functioning in a variety of models, configurations, and locations. SBHCs are indicated when parents have limited financial resources or inadequate health insurance, limiting…
Descriptors: Economically Disadvantaged, Surgery, School Personnel, Delivery Systems
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Nunez, Ralph da Costa; Collignon, Kate – Educational Leadership, 1997
Over 750,000 U.S. school-age children are homeless. Schools can eliminate attendance and environmental barriers sabotaging these children's education by becoming communities of learning that provide specialized education for children, contextualized education for parents, and linkages to needed services. The Bronx's Brownstone School, Chicago's…
Descriptors: Agency Cooperation, Children, Elementary Secondary Education, Homeless People
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Agosto, Rosa – NASSP Bulletin, 1999
In 1987, the Children's Aid Society of New York City and the Central Board of Education agreed to develop four full-service community schools. Programs stress educational improvement, family involvement, and comprehensive services. The CAS technical assistance center has helped create 45 U.S. and overseas community schools. (MLH)
Descriptors: Child Welfare, Childhood Needs, Community Schools, Cooperative Programs
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Jones, Bruce Anthony – Educational Research Quarterly, 1996
The study of four community-based organizations (CBOs) participating in the Attendance Improvement Dropout Prevention program in New York City illustrates that it is important to distinguish among the characteristics of CBOs when schools think about forming collaboratives with them. CBOs may serve very different purposes for school needs. (SLD)
Descriptors: Attendance, Community Organizations, Cooperation, Dropout Prevention
McGillis, Daniel – 1996
This Program Focus discusses the strategies of the Beacon Community Center Program (the Beacons), the history of its crime prevention programs, and general operations. It focuses on the activities of one particular program, Red Hook in Brooklyn (New York City), before analyzing the Beacons' potential for preventing crime. A core concept of the…
Descriptors: Ancillary School Services, At Risk Persons, Community Centers, Community Programs