Children
& Youth
Recent
reports are showing that the educational performance of students
in the United States is not keeping pace with the nation's demand
for high school and college graduates who are well grounded in
reading, writing, science, and mathematics. High priority must
be placed on improving the education of disadvantaged students,
who constitute a growing proportion of the student body in urban
schools.
In
an attempt to deal with these challenges, the Corporation's program,
Education and Healthy Development of Children and Youth, is focusing
on the early developmental years, when the biological, emotional,
and intellectual underpinnings of long-term healthy development
and educational success are established, and on the transition
from ages ten to fifteen, when many young people begin to engage
in risk-taking behaviors and move toward dropping out of school.
The
subprogram in early childhood and early grades includes
efforts to strengthen families with young children, improve the
quality of early care and education, and ensure success in moving
from preschool to the early elementary grades. Under young adolescents,
the foundation seeks to enhance the educational achievement of
middle grade and junior high school students and reduce their
involvement in violence, drug use, and early sexual activity.
Across both age spans, the Corporation emphasizes ways that families,
schools, community organizations, and the media can cooperate
in helping children and young adolescents become healthy, productive,
problem-solving adults.
In
science education, grants are made to improve the teaching
and learning of science and mathematics, in school and during
the nonschool hours. The Corporation is particularly concerned
with the replication of effective programs that encourage minority
members and girls to pursue studies in science and math.
Under
education reform, the emphasis is on strengthening the
teaching profession, implementing performance standards for students,
restructuring schools to promote high educational achievement
of all students, and linking schools more effectively to other
institutions.
Between
1986 and 1996, the developmental and educational needs of children
and young adolescents were addressed by three study groups: the
Carnegie Task Force on Meeting the Needs of Young Children, the
Carnegie Task Force on Learning in the Primary Grades, and the
Carnegie Council on Adolescent Development. The reports of these
study groups together cover the first fifteen years of life and
form the basis for a comprehensive approach to children's learning
and development.
Through
its crosscutting, or general, grants, the Corporation is
exploring the broad social and economic forces that affect family
functioning and linking new knowledge about children and youth
to media and policy audiences. In the Youth Intergroup Relations
Initiative, grants are supporting research aimed at improving
relations among children and youth from different racial, ethnic,
and religious backgrounds.
As
a result of the Corporation's review of its current programs,
it is possible that priorities within the program on children
and youth will change in 1998.
EARLY
CHILDHOOD AND EARLY GRADES
Carnegie
Corporation of New York, New York, NY. Technical assistance
to the Starting Points State and Community Partnerships for Young
Children. Appropriation administered by the officers of the Corporation.
One year, $440,000.
The
Starting Points State and Community Partnerships for Young Children
is a program of grants to ten states and six cities to test strategies
for adopting recommendations of the Corporation's task force on
meeting the needs of young children. The recommendations are to
promote responsible parenthood, ensure high-quality child care
choices, provide children with good health and protection, and
mobilize community action toward these ends. In June 1997, experts
in child development, programs, and policy met with the grantees
to review progress and assess the impact of new health and human
services block grants on state and city programs. Corporation
staff described the initiative to legislators and business leaders
and advised a public engagement campaign to place young children's
needs higher on the nation's agenda.
Michael
H. Levine, Program Officer, Carnegie Corporation of New York.
Harvard
University, Cambridge, MA. Technical assistance and research
on state and community initiatives to meet the needs of young
children. Fifteen months, $200,000.
Early
results of the Starting Points partnerships are the subject of
analyses by the Harvard Family Research Project and the National
Center for Children in Poverty at Columbia University. Team members
are studying the sites' use of evaluation data to improve decisions
about their programs, their formulation of strategies to sustain
progress, and the impact of devolution, especially welfare changes.
Papers will be issued to the sites and to policymakers at all
levels who are concerned with educational, health, and social
programs. The Harvard researchers are also helping site leaders
share information with each other and perform their own assessments.
Heather
B. Weiss, Director, Harvard Family Research Project.
Boston
University, Boston, MA. Technical assistance and publications
on young children's healthy development. One year, $183,500.
Members
of the pediatrics department of Boston University's School of
Medicine are preparing educational materials synthesizing research
findings on brain growth in the first three years of life and
on the relationship between mothers' well-being and their children's
healthy development. Starting Points leaders will use these materials
in presentations to policymakers, business leaders, health providers,
and parents. Project staff members are also fostering cooperation
between Starting Points sites and the Healthy Steps demonstration
program, funded by the Commonwealth Fund, that trains pediatricians
to work with parents in support of young children's growth and
development.
Barry
S. Zuckerman, Professor and Chairman, Department of Pediatrics,
Boston University School of Medicine.
Families
and Work Institute, New York, NY. Public education campaign
on meeting the needs of young children, conducted in collaboration
with the Reiner Foundation. Twenty-two months, $350,000.
In
1995 the Reiner Foundation and the Families and Work Institute
began collaborating on a national campaign to increase public
understanding of the importance of the early years in laying a
foundation for lifelong health and learning. The campaign has
produced public service announcements and a prime-time television
program that first aired on abc in April 1997, coinciding with
the publication of a special issue of Newsweek concentrating
on the healthy development of children and their families. A videotape
and a cd-rom for new parents have been developed, along with a
toll-free telephone number linking callers to community resources.
More than a hundred national organizations, and coalitions in
every state, have participated in the campaign, which has also
been supported by other foundations.
Ellen
Galinsky, President, Families and Work Institute.
Columbia
University, New York, NY. Support of the National Center for
Children in Poverty. One year, $500,000.
The
National Center for Children in Poverty, based at Columbia University's
School of Public Health, promotes promising state and local approaches
to maternal and child health, early childhood development, and
family and community support. In 1998 it is issuing an update
of Map and Track, an inventory of program and policy initiatives
for young children in all fifty states. The new edition will expand
the indicators of child health and well-being and examine the
effect on children of changes in relevant federal policies. Jointly
with the Harvard Family Research Project, the center is analyzing
progress achieved under the Starting Points grants initiative
and providing technical assistance to the grantees.
J.
Lawrence Aber, Director, National Center for Children in Poverty.
Yale
University, New Haven, CT. Dissemination of the final report
of the Quality 2000 Initiative for the Advancement of Early Care
and Education. Eighteen months, $300,000.
The
1997 report of the Quality 2000 Initiative for the Advancement
of Early Care and Education, Not by Chance, concludes that most
of the nation's early childhood programs are of low quality and
do not prepare children adequately for school. The report, produced
in consultation with scholars, policymakers, practitioners, and
business leaders, calls for high standards of care and education,
improved training and compensation for and accountability by caregivers,
and licensing of facilities that promote children's health and
development. Quality 2000 staff have prepared an abridged version
of the report and are creating a World Wide Web site. The A. L.
Mailman Family Foundation also provides support.
Sharon
Lynn Kagan, Senior Associate, Bush Center in Child Development
and Social Policy.
National
Governors' Association Center for Best Practices, Washington,
DC. Assistance to states in implementing policies that promote
young children's healthy development and school readiness. Eighteen
months, $175,000.
Governors
in several states have become strong proponents of programs to
promote young children's healthy development and readiness for
school. The National Governors' Association Center for Best Practices
is producing and distributing fact sheets, reports, a handbook,
and other written materials for governors and their policy advisors
on such topics as states' responses to welfare changes, estimated
savings in health and other expenditures that may result from
investments in early childhood programs, new measures of the effectiveness
of these programs, and the establishment of public/private partnerships
on behalf of children.
Evelyn
Ganzglass, Director, Employment and Social Services Policy Studies,
National Governors' Association Center for Best Practices.
Finance
Project, Washington, DC. Research and planning on the financing
of programs for young children and their families. One year, $120,000.
Early
care and education programs are a patchwork of numerous separate,
uncoordinated federally funded programs and a few initiatives
financed by states and localities. As the nation faces a growing
demand for services for young children, states and cities are
recognizing the need for new financing strategies. The Finance
Project is an independent organization created to improve the
effectiveness and equity of public funding for early childhood
programs. Staff members are bringing state and local policymakers
together to identify solutions to common financing problems and
receive updates on the impact of block grants and welfare changes
on the funding of services for young children. Additional funding
comes from the W. K. Kellogg and the Miriam and Peter Haas foundations.
Cheryl
D. Hayes, Executive Director, Finance Project.
Wheelock
College, Boston, MA. Support of the Center for Career Development
in Early Care and Education. Two years, $350,000.
Making
a Career of It, a 1993 publication of the Center for Career
Development in Early Care and Education at Wheelock College, reported
that states lack coordinated systems for training staff in early
childhood programs. With policymakers in four states, the center
is creating quality assurance mechanisms, such as staff credentialing
and certification systems, and engaging higher education institutions
in building model training projects. Beyond serving as a clearinghouse
for information on state regulations governing early care and
education, it is launching a project to demonstrate, through research
and pilot programs, how to expand and diversify leadership of
the early childhood field. The center also receives funding from
government agencies and other foundations.
Andrea
Genser, Executive Director, Center for Career Development in Early
Care and Education.
National
Center for the Early Childhood Work Force, Washington, DC.
Support. Eighteen months, $225,000.
In
1997 the National Center for the Early Childhood Work Force released
the results of two studies. One identifies innovative practices
being tested by government, business, and the nonprofit sector
to improve child care workers' skills and job stability. The second
study analyzes the impact that accreditation of a child care facility
has on staff quality and compensation. The center is examining
the extent to which former welfare recipients and others without
previous child care training are entering the field. It is also
producing a resource manual for child care centers on ways to
stabilize staffing. Additional support comes from the David and
Lucile Packard Foundation and the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation.
Claudia
E. Wayne, Executive Director, National Center for the Early Childhood
Work Force.
Center
on Budget and Policy Priorities, Washington, DC. Policy analyses
and publications on federal and state health and nutrition programs
for low-income mothers and young children. One year, $200,000.
In
1996 Congress redesigned the nation's welfare program to be administered
by the states. Staff members of the Center on Budget and Policy
Priorities are assessing the effect of welfare changes on state
and local child health programs and on federal programs that serve
childrenCin particular, Medicaid, which offers preventive health
care and treatment, and the Women, Infants and Children program,
which provides nutritious foods. They are also informing professional
groups about state outreach and enrollment strategies for ensuring
that children eligible for Medicaid continue to have access to
health care. Other foundations are providing further support.
Cynthia
Mann, Senior Policy Analyst, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.
University
of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, CO. Study of the
effectiveness of nurse and paraprofessional home visits for low-income
mothers and children. Twenty-one months, $300,000.
Child
development expert David L. Olds has been studying a prenatal
and early childhood home-visiting program created in 1977 in Elmira,
New York, and later implemented in Memphis and Denver. In Elmira,
women receiving home visits have shown greater workforce participation
and have had fewer pregnancies four years after delivery than
women in a control group; in Memphis, women have smoked less and
consumed less alcohol during their pregnancies. Olds, who now
directs a research unit at the University of Colorado Health Sciences
Center, is analyzing the extent to which the programs, using nurse
or paraprofessional home visitors, produce savings in government
spending on welfare, Medicaid, education, and criminal justice.
David
L. Olds, Director, Prevention Research Center for Family and Child
Health.
National
Committee to Prevent Child Abuse, Chicago, IL. Research network
to evaluate an early childhood intervention and family support
program. Two years, $250,000.
Healthy
Families America was launched in 1992 by the National Committee
to Prevent Child Abuse to provide home visits and health and social
services to at-risk families with young children. Today it operates
in more than 200 communities nationwide. Members of a research
network evaluating the program are identifying ways to reach families
in greatest need, examining the factors that influence participation
in the program, and determining which families benefit the most.
Their findings and those of formal site evaluations will be disseminated
in fact sheets, presentations at professional conferences, and
articles in professional journals.
Deborah
Daro, Director, Center on Child Abuse Prevention Research.
Carnegie
Corporation of New York, New York, NY. Carnegie Task Force
on Learning in the Primary Grades. Appropriation administered
by the officers of the Corporation. One year, $158,700.
In
1996 the Carnegie Task Force on Learning in the Primary Grades
released its report, Years of Promise: A Comprehensive Learning
Strategy for America's Children. The recommendations include
a call for expanded high-quality preschool education and the reorganization
of elementary schools to enable all students to meet rigorous
academic standards before they complete the fourth grade. Another
recommendation is for parents and for leaders of community organizations,
after-school programs, and media organizations to coordinate their
efforts toward ensuring educational success for all children.
This appropriation covered the costs of the report's broad dissemination.
Michael
H. Levine or Anthony W. Jackson, Program Officers, Carnegie Corporation
of New York.
Johns
Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD. Development and dissemination
of an effective instructional program for disadvantaged children.
Eighteen months, $500,000.
Success
for All is a model elementary education program aimed at ensuring
that disadvantaged children succeed in school (see also p. 34).
Created by Johns Hopkins University researchers and Baltimore
public school teachers, it offers early, sustained help in language
development, reading, and writing and provides family support
to strengthen links between learning at home and in school. It
is used in half the nation's fifty largest urban districts and
in a total of 750 schools. A companion program, Roots and Wings,
adds math, social studies, and science. The researchers are creating
new materials for students and the family support teams and hiring
more trainers to scale up both programs. Other foundations provide
further support.
Robert
E. Slavin or Nancy A. Madden, Codirectors, Center for Research
on the Education of Students Placed at Risk.
Yale
University, New Haven, CT. Development and evaluation of a
comprehensive model of school reform and services for families
of children from birth to age twelve. Two years, $350,000.
Elements
of two programsCthe School of the 21st Century and the School
Development Program, devised, respectively, by Yale University
educators Edward Zigler and James P. ComerChave been combined
to create a model of integrated school-linked services for families
with children from birth to age twelve. The model is operating
on a pilot basis in four school districts. With support also from
the Kraft Foundation, staff members at Yale's Bush Center in Child
Development and Social Policy are studying the model's effect
on children's school readiness and academic progress and on parents'
knowledge of child development and involvement in their children's
schooling.
Matia
Finn-Stevenson, Associate Director, Bush Center in Child Development
and Social Policy.
Community
Television of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA. Evaluation
of and educational outreach for a television series on intergroup
understanding and prosocial behavior for preschool children. Eighteen
months, $300,000.
The
Puzzle Place, created by Community Television of Southern
California and Lancit Media Productions in New York, is a public
television series developed to encourage children's prosocial
behavior and intergroup understanding. Its puppet characters,
who represent various cultures and backgrounds, emphasize taking
responsibility, telling the truth, and cooperating with each other.
A brochure for parents and a guide for caregivers have been distributed
nationwide through parent and community organizations, libraries,
and Head Start programs. A research advisory team based at Harvard
University is formulating a plan to assess the program's impact
on children's development of social skills and ways that parents
can reinforce these skills.
Marjorie
Kaplan, Vice President, Lancit Media Productions.
Judge
Baker Children's Center, Boston, MA. Evaluation of a social
skills and literacy development program. Two years, $300,000.
Voices
of Love and Freedom, a program for grades KB12, aims to strengthen
children's relationships with family, friends, and community.
Created by the Judge Baker Children's Center and the graduate
schools of education of Harvard University and the University
of Massachusetts, it is being adopted within Boston schools. By
reading and discussing stories about children who, like themselves,
may be experiencing interpersonal problems, students learn social
skills based on self-awareness and intergroup understanding. The
center is studying the program's effects on students' social and
academic skills and on the likelihood of their engaging in risk-taking
behavior.
Robert
L. Selman, Senior Associate, Judge Baker Children's Center.
YOUNG
ADOLESCENCE
Carnegie
Corporation of New York, New York, NY. Middle Grade School
State Policy Initiative. Appropriation administered by the officers
of the Corporation. One year, $1,050,000.
The
Middle Grade School State Policy Initiative, launched in 1990,
is a program of competitive grants to agencies in fifteen states
aimed at promoting reforms in the education of young adolescents.
These reforms were called for in Turning Points: Preparing Youth
for the 21st Century (1989), one of several Corporation reports
on young people's educational and developmental needs. Each Corporation
grant is matched by a commitment of funds from the state.
The
Council of Chief State School Officers is a national organization
of the public officials who head elementary and secondary education
in each state. Since 1991 the Corporation has contracted with
the council to provide technical assistance to the grantees in
each of the fifteen states participating in the initiative and
to networks of schools within the states. The council is also
being asked to monitor each grantee's progress. It is organizing
conferences for project directors and school principals to consider
ways of further integrating middle grade reform into the states'
broader education reform agendas. Council staff members will write
a book on policies supportive of middle grade reform, for publication
in 1998.
Also
under this appropriation, researchers at the University of Rhode
Island are completing an analysis of the impact of the reforms
in the fifteen states. The research correlates changes in school
practices with changes in academic and behavioral outcomes for
students and with changes in job satisfaction among school staff
members. It will be used to support the preparation of a guide
to successful practices. In addition, the institute, in cooperation
with state project directors and Corporation staff, is planning
the establishment of a national middle grade reform research
and development center.
Anthony
W. Jackson, Program Officer, Carnegie Corporation of New York.
Middle
Grade School State Policy Initiative, New York, NY. Implementation
of state policy reforms in middle grade education. Eleven grants,
two years, $200,000 each.
The
Middle Grade School State Policy Initiative, an operating program
of the Corporation, has led to the formulation of state policies
encouraging local middle and junior high schools to adopt promising
practices in line with the main recommendations of Turning
Points. Various states have formed partnerships with private
institutions and health and other state agencies, thus promoting
the efficient integration of programs and resources for students.
All the states have concentrated their efforts on networks of
"systemic change schools" serving large numbers of low-income
students. In each state, students in at least some schools have
shown impressive gains in academic achievement.
Eleven
states, listed below, have each received a final grant. Strategies
for sustaining school reform include the creation of university-based
centers to improve adolescent education and development and
the establishment of public/private partnerships between state
education agencies and middle grade educational associations.
California Department of Education Colorado Department of Education
Connecticut State Department of Education Ollinois State Board
of Education Maryland State Department of Education University
of New Mexico North Dakota Department of Public Instruction
Rhode Island Department of Elementary and Secondary Education
South Carolina Education Improvement Act Select Committee Texas
Education Agency Vermont Department of Education
Anthony
W. Jackson, Program Officer, Carnegie Corporation of New York.
University
of Rhode Island, Kingston, RI. Research on the impact of adopting
middle grade reforms. Two years, $449,000.
In
1990 the Association of Illinois Middle Schools created the Illinois
Middle Grades Network. Through consultations, workshops, and referral
to expert advisors, the association helps the seventy-three schools
in the network plan and adopt changes recommended in Turning
Points. Researchers formerly at the University of Illinois
and now at the University of Rhode Island are analyzing the impact
of introducing the reforms in the Illinois schools. Early results
reveal that as implementation moves from a narrow to a wide range
of reforms, academic and behavioral outcomes for at-risk students
improve dramatically. The study team is presenting these and other
findings in professional journals and at national conferences.
Robert
D. Felner, Director, National Center on Public Education and Social
Policy, University of Rhode Island.
Puerto
Rico Community Foundation, Hato Rey, PR. Project to improve
middle grade schools in Puerto Rico. Seventeen months, $350,000.
In
1992 the Puerto Rico Community Foundation created a commission
of educators and island policymakers to document problems in the
education of Puerto Rico's young adolescents and propose interventions.
With assistance from the foundation, eight demonstration schools
in disadvantaged communities are adopting the commission's recommendations,
many of which parallel the principles outlined in Turning Points.
In addition to increasing the number of demonstration schools
to twelve, the foundation is publishing working papers on critical
issues in middle grade reform in Puerto Rico and expanding membership
in a network of middle grade educators to include health workers
and other professionals serving adolescents.
Andrea
Barrientos, Program Coordinator, Puerto Rico Community Foundation.
Johns
Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD. Development and implementation
of a middle grade curriculum. Two years, $400,000.
Success
for All, developed by education researcher Robert E. Slavin, is
a model elementary school program that assists disadvantaged children
with language development, reading, and writing. A program called
Roots and Wings adds math, social studies, and science components
to the model. Johns Hopkins University researchers are adapting
the programs to the middle grades and testing them in schools,
some of which are participating in the Corporation's Middle Grade
School State Policy Initiative. The curriculum will provide the
basis for literacy materials and training to be replicated in
additional schools.
Robert
E. Slavin or Nancy A. Madden, Codirectors, Center for Research
on the Education of Students Placed at Risk.
Philadelphia
Education Fund, Philadelphia, PA. Development and dissemination
of effective middle grade reforms. Two years, $500,000.
The
Talent Development Middle School model is a comprehensive approach
to middle school reform that provides all students with a demanding
curriculum in reading/language arts, writing, mathematics, science,
and social studies. It was created by Douglas J. MacIver of Johns
Hopkins University's Center for Research on the Education of Students
Placed at Risk. The Philadelphia Education Fund, the School District
of Philadelphia, and the center are refining the model and implementing
it in three middle schools that serve very poor families in Philadelphia.
Staff members of the fund are creating networks for the city's
middle school principals and teachers, through which they can
learn about and share effective practices. Further support comes
from the Pew Charitable Trusts.
Warren
Simmons, Executive Director, Philadelphia Education Fund.
National
Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC. Support of the Forum
on Adolescence. Eighteen months, $800,000.
The
National Academy of Sciences' Board on Children, Youth, and Families
addresses contemporary conditions that affect young people and
their families. The board's Forum on Adolescence, created in 1996
with core support from the Corporation, is charged with synthesizing
and stimulating research to advance social action related to adolescent
development and communicating the results to policymakers. Guided
by experts from a range of disciplines, the forum has convened
meetings to encourage collaborative research and action in adolescent
health, development, and well-being. Planned efforts include an
annual symposium for researchers and policymakers, a workshop
on youth development, and a seminar presenting research findings
to regional journalists.
Michele
D. Kipke, Director, Forum on Adolescence, National Academy of
Sciences.
Boys
& Girls Clubs of America, Atlanta, GA. Implementation
and evaluation of model education enhancement programs for young
adolescents in public housing projects. Eight months, $201,000.
Of
the two million children and adolescents served by Boys &
Girls Clubs of America, two-thirds live in poverty. The organization
is completing an evaluation of a model education enhancement program
in public housing sites. The program offers young people structured
after-school opportunities to do homework, engage in group discussions,
participate in sports, and attend cultural events. Five clubs
with both the traditional program and the education enhancement
model are being compared with ten other public housing sitesCfive
with a traditional club program only and five with no club at
all. The findings will be published in the organization's Connections
magazine and in scholarly journals.
Judith
J. Carter, Senior Vice President for Program Services, Boys &
Girls Clubs of America.
American
Medical Association Education and Research Foundation, Chicago,
IL. Training to provide clinical preventive services in school-based
health centers. Two years, $600,000.
The
pamphlet, Guidelines for Adolescent Preventive Services,
was issued in 1992 by the American Medical Association (ama) for
those working in private medical practice, community health centers,
managed care facilities, and school health centers. The guidelines
offer a practical framework for providing high-quality health
care to young people. The ama has created a training program for
practitioners in school-based health centers and is continuing
to develop demonstration health centers in middle schools. The
effects of the guidelines on providers' practices and on adolescents'
and parents' attitudes and behavior are being assessed. Funding
is to the ama Education and Research Foundation, the group's tax-exempt
arm.
Arthur
B. Elster, Director, Department of Adolescent Health, American
Medical Association Education and Research Foundation.
Children's
Aid Society, New York, NY. Information and technical assistance
on developing community schools. Two years, $376,000.
In
1992 the Children's Aid Society launched a full-service model
community school in a largely Latino section of New York City.
I.S. 218, a middle school, consists of four self-contained academies
open six days a week, year-round, from 7:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m.
Besides a rigorous academic program, it offers breakfast, after-school
activities, and family services. Society staff members promote
the model through presentations and a newsletter. The William
T. Grant and the Charles Stewart Mott foundations are supporting
a longitudinal evaluation of educational outcomes at the school.
In addition, the society's National Institute for Community Schools
is assisting schools across the country and other localities that
are engaged in developing similar programs.
Philip
Coltoff, Executive Director, Children's Aid Society.
National
Center for Youth Law, Chapel Hill, NC. Study of adolescents'
access to health care under Medicaid, managed care, and health
care reform, conducted with the National Health Law Program. Two
years, $390,000.
The
National Center for Youth Law and the National Health Law Program
have analyzed the effect of changes in Medicaid and managed care
on adolescents' access to health services and the quality of those
services. Their findings and recommendations are being communicated
through written materials and presentations to professional and
policy audiences. The two groups are now preparing policy briefs
on four adolescent health issues: coverage for the uninsured,
the adequacy of copayments for services, age-appropriate performance
measures of services, and strategies to meet adolescents' special
health needs. They are also helping four states create model managed
care arrangements for adolescents.
Abigail
English, Project Director, Adolescent Health Care Project, National
Center for Youth Law.
National
Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy, Washington, DC. Support.
One year, $500,000.
The
National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy, created in 1996,
is a nonpartisan private-sector effort to address the rate of
U.S. school-age pregnancy, the highest of any industrialized nation.
Four task forces are enlisting help from the media, stimulating
state and local coalitions, linking research findings about effective
programs with these efforts, and leading discussions of ways to
move forward in a society of diverse values. The campaign, also
funded by individuals and other foundations, is observing pregnancy
prevention programs, holding meetings, and issuing commissioned
papers. Its 1997 report, No Easy Answers: Research Findings
on Programs to Reduce Teen Pregnancy, received widespread
public attention.
Sarah
S. Brown, Director, National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy.
Cornerstone
Consulting Group, Houston, TX. Technical assistance and replication
of the Teen Outreach Program. Two years, $150,000.
The
Teen Outreach Program (top) is one of the nation's few pregnancy
prevention programs to have been carefully evaluated and to have
shown positive results. Adopted in middle and high schools in
thirty-six states, top combines life-skills instruction with community
service and peer support. The program, which was created by the
Association of Junior Leagues International, is managed by Cornerstone
Consulting Group, a youth-serving organization. Besides revising
curricular materials, monitoring program quality, and establishing
top in churches, residential care facilities, and group homes,
Cornerstone is replicating it in the affiliates of state and national
groups. The Charles Stewart Mott Foundation also provides funding.
Sharon
Lovick Edwards, Cofounder and Partner, Cornerstone Consulting
Group.
Child
Welfare League of America, Washington, DC. Project to prevent
pregnancy in adolescents in out-of-home care, conducted in collaboration
with the Council of State Governments. Two years, $253,000.
As
states revise their welfare systems, they are studying the link
between adolescent childbearing and welfare dependency and devising
pregnancy prevention strategies. The Child Welfare League of America
and the Southern Regional Project on Infant Mortality of the Southern
Governors' Association have informed Tennessee and South Carolina
legislators about model efforts in other states. One focus is
the needs of adolescent girls in out-of-home care, who have especially
high rates of childbearing. Besides holding a briefing in Alabama,
staff members are updating a resource manual for child welfare
personnel and foster care parents and issuing materials on programs
in all the southern states. The Charles Stewart Mott Foundation
furnishes additional support.
Bronwyn
Mayden, Program Director, Adolescent Pregnancy and Prevention
Services, Child Welfare League of America.
National
Urban League, New York, NY. Education and youth development
program. Two years, $250,000.
The
National Urban League, which is supported by corporations and
other foundations, was created in 1910 to help African Americans
attain social and economic equality. In a pilot effort, the league
is working with two of its 115 affiliates to assess the quality
of teaching and youth development activities in the community.
Each education audit focuses on the quality of teachers and their
training, curriculum content and rigor, support for students taking
academically challenging courses, access to sophisticated educational
tools and resources, and the availability of constructive after-school
and summer programs. The audits will be used by these two affiliates
to build support for corrective action among parents, members
of the clergy, and community leaders.
Velma
Cobb, Director, National Education/Youth Development Policy, Research
and Advocacy, National Urban League.
Academy
for Educational Development, Washington, DC. Strengthening
the capacity of intermediary organizations to promote youth development.
Two years, $400,000.
The
Academy for Educational Development's Center for Youth Development
and Policy Research is assisting two national and two local organizationsCthe
United Way, the Coalition of Community Foundations for Youth,
the Community Network for Youth Development in San Francisco,
and YouthNet in Kansas CityCin becoming stronger advocates for
youth programs. United Way affiliates and coalition members are
creating funding guidelines for youth programs, while the two
local groups are devising public education strategies and materials
in support of these programs. Additional funding comes from the
Annie E. Casey and Ford foundations.
Richard
Murphy, Director, Center for Youth Development and Policy Research,
Academy for Educational Development.
National
Coalition of Hispanic Health and Human Services Organizations,
Washington, DC. Policy initiative on the health and well-being
of Hispanic youth. One year, $285,000.
The
Growing Up Hispanic Youth Policy Initiative, created by the National
Coalition of Hispanic Health and Human Services Organizations
(cossmho), analyzes data from national and state sources on different
subgroups of Hispanic adolescents. Sixteen categories are covered,
including physical fitness, mental health, and access to insurance
and clinical services. The project has been pilot-tested by two
cossmho member organizations in Colorado and Texas and, with Ford
Foundation funding, has been expanded to California, Florida,
New Mexico, and New York. Data will be used to make recommendations
to local, state, and regional agencies seeking to improve Hispanic
young people's health.
Jane
L. Delgado, President and Chief Executive Officer, National Coalition
of Hispanic Health and Human Services Organizations.
Carter
Center, Atlanta, GA. Program on guns as a health risk to children
and adolescents. Two years, $400,000.
Not
Even One is a program of the Carter Center aimed at reducing firearm
fatalities among children and youth. In Atlanta, Albuquerque/Santa
Fe, and Compton/Long Beach, California, program staff members
train teams of religious leaders, criminal justice officials,
and parents and other private citizens to use a public health
perspective in analyzing every incidentChomicide, suicide, accidentCinvolving
the death of a young person by gunfire. From their investigations,
the teams identify the factors leading to firearm violence and
suggest preventive interventions. The center is refining the program's
training, strengthening its data collection, and sponsoring an
independent evaluation. Support also comes from the Robert Wood
Johnson Foundation.
Wallace
S. Woodard, Director, Not Even One, Carter Center.
Omega
Boys Club of San Francisco, San Francisco, CA. National syndication
of Street Soldiers, a radio program intended to prevent youth
violence. Two years, $300,000.
The
Omega Boys Club of San Francisco serves young men and women ages
eleven to twenty-five. Its programs, which receive further funding
from corporations and other foundations, include tutorials, college
placement and scholarship support, employment training, and discussions
of values and family responsibilities. Street Soldiers, a radio
call-in show, fields about forty calls a week that address substance
abuse, violence, and difficult family situations. Listeners whose
problems cannot be handled on air are asked to call a help line,
where they are referred to an Omega counselor or to social service
agencies in their community. Street Soldiers is being syndicated
to ten cities nationwide, and help lines are being created in
those cities to connect listeners to local services.
Joseph
Marshall, Executive Director, Omega Boys Club of San Francisco.
Vera
Institute of Justice, New York, NY. Ethnographic study of
violence by and toward adolescents. Twenty-six months, $200,000.
The
Vera Institute of Justice's Growing Up Safe and Smart Project
is studying violence among New York youth in three schools and
an after-school program. Ethnographic researchers are interviewing
and tracking students from seventh to tenth grade to learn how
much violence they are exposed to or involved in, whether they
respond to violence individually or in groups, and whether they
feel more reluctant to fight once adults discover the conflict.
The findings will be used to design violence prevention programs
in New York and elsewhere that foster collaboration among parents,
schools, and the police. The Pinkerton and William T. Grant foundations
and the National Institute of Justice also provide funding.
Mercer
L. Sullivan, Senior Research Fellow, Vera Institute of Justice.
Center
on Addiction and Substance Abuse, New York, NY. Adolescent
studies program. Two years, $500,000.
People
who reach the age of twenty without smoking, using illegal drugs,
or abusing alcohol rarely take up these practices. This fact is
at the heart of the adolescent studies program of the Center on
Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University. The final
report of the center's National Commission on Substance Abuse
Among America's Adolescents will detail a survey of young people
and their parents and recommend strategies for schools and communities.
The adolescent studies program is also refining the six-city Children
at Risk demonstration project, which provides social services
to at-risk eleven- to thirteen-year-olds and their families. The
project will be replicated in five other cities. Funding also
comes from corporations and other foundations.
Joseph
A. Califano, Jr., Chairman and President, Center on Addiction
and Substance Abuse.
Educational
Broadcasting Corporation. New York, NY. Production and educational
outreach for two In the Mix special programs. One year, $135,000.
In
the Mix, a half-hour television program for teenagers airing on
Public Broadcasting Service stations, consists of news and consumer
segments on health, educational, and social issues interspersed
with music videos. Two special shows have been created by the
independent production company Castle Works, with wnet-tv as the
presenting station. The first is SportsCGet in the Game, highlighting
the social and physical benefits of playing sports; the second
is Self Image, Health and the Media, addressing the media's definition
of ideal physical appearance. Discussion guides are being distributed
to national and local outreach partners. The Corporation's grant
is to the Educational Broadcasting Corporation, the fund-raising
arm of wnet.
Sue
Castle, President, Castle Works, New York, NY.
Joy
G. Dryfoos, Hastings-on-Hudson, NY. Research and dissemination
of a book on programs that foster adolescent development. One
year, $50,000.
In
her forthcoming book, Safe Passage: Making It Through Adolescence
in a Risky Society, Joy G. Dryfoos identifies for parents, teachers,
and community leaders some of the innovative programs that have
been shown to affect young people's learning and development in
positive ways. The book focuses in particular on restructured
schools, elements of which include small classes, sustained studentBteacher
contact, and the availability of after-school programs and community
service opportunities. The Corporation has supported Dryfoos's
research and writing on two previous books as well as this one.
The current grant is permitting the purchase of copies of Safe
Passage for distribution to policymakers and for other dissemination
efforts. It is also enabling Dryfoos to continue writing about
youth development.
SCIENCE
EDUCATION
American
Museum of Natural History, New York, NY. Planning and production
of outreach programs and materials in earth and planetary science.
Two years, $400,000.
The
American Museum of Natural History's National Center for Education,
Technology and Science Literacy creates teaching materials and
programs for use in schools, libraries, universities, community
centers, and science museums. A new initiative of the center concerns
the origins, evolution, and composition of the earth and the universe.
Jointly with scientists, science teachers, curriculum developers,
television producers, and telecommunications specialists, the
center is devising educational plans and prototypes for a coordinated
set of programs and outreach activities on earth and planetary
science. Further support comes from public and other private sources.
Myles
Gordon, Director of Education, American Museum of Natural History.
WGBH
Educational Foundation, Boston, MA. Production of a television
program on scientific discovery and related outreach activities.
Two years, $150,000.
A
Science Odyssey is a public television series for young people
designed to recast their perception of science and scientists
and portray science as a useful way to solve problems and look
at the world. The program, developed by wgbh-tv in Boston, is
airing nationally in five segments on pbs stations in early 1998.
The topics are technology and engineering; views of the universe
and matter; origins of life; health and medicine; and human nature
and behavior. wgbh and national youth-serving and science organizations
are creating videocassettes and a teacher's guide. They are also
carrying out science demonstration activities for youth. Public
and other private sources provide further funding.
Thomas
Friedman, Executive Producer, wgbh Educational Foundation.
Scholastic
Entertainment, New York, NY. Production of a television series
about science for elementary school children. One year, $250,000.
The
Magic School Bus is the most popular science program on public
television for its target audience of six- to nine-year-olds.
The series, produced by Scholastic Entertainment (formerly Scholastic
Productions), features a school bus that can transport children
from the inner spaces of the human body to outer space, where
they explore different scientific facts and concepts. Topics aired
in the 1997B98 season include molecules, gravity, wetlands, and
computers. Scholastic offers free activity guides to schools,
museums, public television stations, and youth-serving organizations,
with special attention to settings that serve girls and minority
children. Additional funding comes from the National Science Foundation.
Deborah
Forte, Division Head, Scholastic Entertainment.
College
Entrance Examination Board, Washington, DC. Planning and development
of a research agenda for the equity 2000 program. Twenty-five
months, $400,000.
EQUITY
2000, a precollege program of the College Entrance Examination
Board, aims to increase minority and low-income students' rates
of college entry and academic success. Because algebra and geometry
are usually prerequisites for college preparatory courses, the
program encourages participating schools to offer these gateway
courses to all their middle and junior-high-school students. Evaluations
show enrollment gains in algebra and geometry but high course
failure rates and lower-than-expected results on state tests.
Besides creating algebra and geometry assessments, the board is
funding research to explain students' success or failure and will
propose ways to improve achievement levels.
Vinetta
C. Jones, Executive Director, EQUITY 2000.
EDUCATION
REFORM
National
Governors' Association Center for Best Practices, Washington,
DC. Assistance to states in implementing national goals for education
in the 1990s. Eighteen months, $400,000.
National
education goals set in 1989 require that all students, regardless
of background or ability, acquire the knowledge and skills needed
to succeed in a changing economy. The National Governors' Association
Center for Best Practices offers information and technical assistance
to states seeking to create internationally competitive standards.
Center staff members are discussing assessments and accountability
systems aligned with the standards, recommending ways to link
the standards to teacher preparation and professional development,
and proposing interstate partnerships as a cost-saving technique.
Other foundations also provide support.
John
W. Barth, Director, Education Policy Studies, National Governors'
Association Center for Best Practices.
National
Board for Professional Teaching Standards, Washington, DC.
Support. One year, $1,000,000.
The
National Board for Professional Teaching Standards was created
by the Corporation in 1987 to implement the recommendations of
A Nation Prepared: Teachers for the 21st Century, a report
of the Carnegie Forum on Education and the Economy. The board
has set standards for excellence in teaching in different fields
and has created a voluntary performance-based certification system,
called National Board Certification, to assess and certify teachers
who meet these standards. Certification focuses on teachers' mastery
of subject matter, understanding of child and adolescent development,
and ability to work effectively with children and parents.
Certificates
are offered in fields defined by developmental level (early
and middle childhood, early adolescence, young adulthood) and
subject matter, including special certificates for work with
students whose English proficiency is limited and students with
disabilities. The certificates are in various stages of research
and development and will become available over the next four
years. The first seven certificatesC$in early childhood/generalist;
middle childhood/generalist; early adolescence/generalist; early
adolescence/English language arts; early adolescence and young
adulthood/math; adolescence/science; and early adolescence and
young adulthood/artCare now being offered, making the opportunity
to study for certification available to about half of all American
teachers. A total of 912 teachers have been certified by the
board.
Twenty-three
states have enacted legislation providing incentives and recognition
to teachers who obtain board certification. Dozens of school
districts nationwide are encouraging teachers to apply and are
creating professional support mechanisms to help them prepare.
Major
support is also provided by federal, corporate, and other foundation
sources.
James
A. Kelly, President, National Board for Professional Teaching
Standards.
Teachers
College, Columbia University, New York, NY. Implementation
of recommendations from a commission on teacher development. Two
years, $418,000.
The
report of the National Commission on Teaching & America's
Future, What Matters Most (1996), urges higher standards for students
and teachers, better teacher education and recruitment, restructured
schools, and systems to reward teachers' expertise. The commission,
based at Teachers College, Columbia University, is educating practitioners,
policymakers, and the public about ways to implement the report.
It is devising model legislation for presentation to state boards
of education and professional groups and assisting efforts to
redesign teacher training and foster professional development.
It is also working with twelve states to create strategic plans
that incorporate the recommendations. The Rockefeller Foundation
cosponsored the commission.
Linda
Darling-Hammond, Executive Director, National Commission on Teaching
& America's Future.
Council
of Chief State School Officers, Washington, DC. Support of
the Interstate New Teacher Assessment and Support Consortium.
Two years, $450,000.
The
Interstate New Teacher Assessment and Support Consortium helps
states assess and license new teachers according to clear standards
of what they should know and be able to do in different subjects.
Thirty-nine states, the two largest teachers' unions, and national
education groups participate in the consortium, a program of the
Council of Chief State School Officers. Eighteen states have adopted
or adapted the model standards to guide reforms of new-teacher
licensing. In addition to publishing its work on licensing standards
in mathematics, English/language arts, and science, the consortium
is creating standards in elementary education and social studies/civics.
M.
Jean Miller, Director, Interstate New Teacher Assessment and Support
Consortium.
National
Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education, Washington,
DC. National system of teacher education accreditation. Two years,
$350,000.
The
National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education, a coalition
of thirty organizations representing teachers, school specialists,
and state and local policymakers, sets standards for teacher education.
Through its New Professional Teacher Project, the council is attempting
to create a national accreditation system founded on performance-based
expectations for teacher preparation that correlate with the expectations
and standards that are being developed for students. The initial
focus is on teaching in the elementary grades. The council is
also holding statewide forums for educators, policymakers, parents,
and the general public to formulate plans for reforms in preparing
and licensing teachers.
Arthur
E. Wise, President, National Council for Accreditation of Teacher
Education.
Recruiting
New Teachers, Belmont, MA. Outreach and response programs.
Two years, $300,000.
Recruiting
New Teachers aims to increase the public's respect for the teaching
profession and to expand the pool of future teachers. Its direct-response
advertising campaign has generated more than a million inquiries
from prospective teachers, almost 40 percent of them members of
minority groups. As part of its effort to enlist more people to
teach in city schools, the organization is developing a self-assessment
tool that urban districts can use to study and improve their recruitment,
induction, and professional development practices. It is also
updating its handbook on careers in teaching. The Pew Charitable
Trusts, the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, and the Stuart Foundations
provide additional funding.
David
Haselkorn, President, Recruiting New Teachers.
University
of Wisconsin, Madison, WI. Technical assistance to school
districts in designing new teacher compensation plans and research
documenting the process. Two years, $300,000.
For
standards-based education reforms to work, teachers must have
the professional skills to teach a world-class curriculum to diverse
student populations. Today's teachers, however, rarely receive
compensation, such as pay contingent on pursuing professional
development, or group performance awards, linked to these skills.
The Consortium for Policy Research in Education is a network of
university-based centers that conduct research aimed at strengthening
American public precollegiate education. Professors at two of
the centersCthe University of Wisconsin and the University of
PennsylvaniaCare designing and implementing new teacher compensation
structures for four school districts across the nation. They will
produce detailed case studies.
Allan
Odden, Professor of Educational Administration, University of
Wisconsin.
Puerto
Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund, New York, NY. Education
Rights Project. Three years, $450,000.
Most
Puerto Rican and other Latino students in this country are educated
in large school systems that are ethnically and economically segregated.
Schools in these systems tend to have relatively inexperienced
teachers and low-quality programs and are often crowded. The Puerto
Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund attempts, through its Education
Rights Project, to make high-quality education available to students
in such schools. The fund is devising an education desegregation
plan for Hartford, Connecticut. It is also investigating whether
New York City's major education reformsCincluding higher standards
and new small, thematic schoolsCprovide equal opportunities for
Latinos. Further support comes from other foundations.
Juan
A. Figueroa, President and General Counsel, Puerto Rican Legal
Defense and Education Fund.
University
of California, Oakland, CA. Evaluation of a writing, mentoring,
and academic counseling program for Hispanic high school students.
Eighteen months, $162,400.
The
Puente Project was founded to help Hispanic students transfer
from community colleges to four-year institutions. Puente now
runs a pilot program, operating in eighteen California high schools,
that aims to increase the number of Hispanic students who graduate
from high school and go on to earn college degrees. Each school
is served by an English teacher, a counselor, and a liaison to
the community who recruits and trains Hispanic professionals to
become mentors. As part of an evaluation of Puente, University
of California researchers are studying students' attendance and
retention in school, grade point average, and college enrollment.
They are also assessing the effects of refinements in the mentoring
program.
Patricia
McGrath or Felix Galaviz, Codirectors, Puente High School Pilot
Program, University of California.
GENERAL
Aspen
Institute, Queenstown, MD. Public policy project to promote
the well-being of children. One year, $400,000.
The
Aspen Institute's Children's Policy Forum brings members of Congress
together with scholars and practitioners to examine the problems
of America's children and youth. Its meetings and an annual retreat
are designed to inform a core group of legislators about selected
issues so that they can help shape public policy for children.
A 1996 retreat on preparing youth for the twenty-first century
addressed family life, citizenship, international comparisons
of education, and business perspectives on the needs of the future
workforce. The 1997 retreat explored the developmental needs and
problems of children ages three to ten.
Dick
Clark, Director, Congressional Program, Aspen Institute.
Harvard
University, Cambridge, MA. Creation of a children's studies
program. Two years, $1,000,000.
Improving
the lives of children in the United States will require access
to the knowledge and insights of many professions and academic
areas. It will also require partnerships of universities, schools,
and community-based institutions. Harvard University's new interdisciplinary
Children's Studies Program aims to draw increased academic and
professional attention to the needs of children, encourage faculty
members and students to devote their talents to children, and
mount effective universityBcommunity efforts on behalf of children.
Leaders of the program include professors of pediatrics, psychiatry,
health policy, government, law, education, and religion.
Undergraduate
and graduate-level courses, a fellowship program, research grants,
faculty seminars, and universitywide events are being developed
at Harvard around three themes: the conditions that foster or
impede children's resilience in the face of adverse circumstances;
the influence of ethnicity, race, and gender on children's aspirations
and behavior; and the social and cultural roots of the public
discourse about children that in turn influence social policies.
These
themes also underlie efforts to strengthen existing links between
Harvard faculty and students and more than 100 programsCincluding
school-based health services, family support centers, legal
clinics, literacy and reading projects, and social skills development
and violence prevention programsCin the Boston area. The directors
of the Children's Studies Program are conferring with mayors,
school and health officials, and community leaders in Boston,
Cambridge, and neighboring cities on ways to increase the effectiveness
and sustainability of these partnerships. They are also identifying
possibilities for creating other collaborative activities to
benefit children.
Martha
Minow, Professor of Law, Harvard Law School.
American
Forum, Washington, DC. Production and dissemination of media
packets on public policy issues affecting children and families.
Two years, $180,000.
At
a time when news outlets depend on wire services for information
of national interest, the American Forum produces media packets
of articles on issues that are tailored to conditions in the South.
The packets are used by newspapers and radio and television stations
to fill gaps in news coverage, write editorials, and prepare public
service announcements. The forum is producing fifty-four packets
on topics concerning children and families, developing a Web site
to serve as an online wire service, and expanding to the Midwest.
It is also surveying the authors of its articles and its media
contacts to assess the materials' effectiveness. The forum receives
further support from other foundations.
Denice
Zeck, Executive Director, American Forum.
New
York Academy of Medicine, New York, NY. Center for urban epidemiologic
studies. Two years, $250,000.
The
Center for Urban Epidemiologic Studies, based at the New York
Academy of Medicine, is a consortium of six academic medical centers,
the city's health department, and other institutions dedicated
to improving the health and well-being of disadvantaged young
people and their families in New York. Among the center's research
projects are studies of asthma among children and the effectiveness
of hiv prevention strategies. A conference on asthma in the urban
environment and a symposium on setting priorities for urban health
were held in 1997. Support also comes from the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, the New York State Department of Health,
corporations, and other foundations.
Ezra
S. Susser, Director, Center for Urban Epidemiologic Studies.
Teachers
College, Columbia University, New York, NY. Fred M. Hechinger
Institute on Education and the Media. Two years, $300,000.
Fred
M. Hechinger, an education writer for the New York Times and a
trustee of and senior advisor to the Corporation, had an abiding
interest in the role of education in shaping individuals and the
nation. When he died in 1995, he was a trustee of Teachers College,
Columbia University. The college's new Hechinger Institute on
Education and the Media holds seminars for education reporters,
editors, and producers to examine the social context of education
and to address topics relevant to educational policymaking. It
also brings together educators and journalists to improve press
coverage of educational issues. Other foundations provide additional
funding.
Gene
Maeroff, Director, Fred M. Hechinger Institute on Education and
the Media.
National
Council of La Raza, Washington, DC. Task force on education
policy for Hispanic children. One year, $100,000.
The
National Council of La Raza operates community-based projects
that bring together parents, teachers, and business leaders to
help Hispanic young people succeed in school. An Education Policy
Task Force of council board members, representatives of council
affiliates, outside experts, and practitioners is developing a
new public policy agenda for education. The task force is analyzing
programs and policiesCincluding educational standards, school
choice, and early childhood programsCand assessing their potential
for producing sustainable improvements in educational outcomes
for Hispanic students. Its findings will be incorporated in a
variety of council publications.
Charles
Kamasaki, Senior Vice President, National Council of La Raza.
Children
Now, Oakland, CA. Conferences on children and the media. One
year, $125,000.
Children
Now works with members of the media industry to improve news coverage
of issues affecting children and their families. It organizes
an annual meeting that brings together leaders from the print
and broadcast media, children's advocates, and policymakers to
produce recommendations on enhancing the treatment of children's
issues. The most recent meeting explored the depiction of girls
in entertainment media. The program also briefs media leaders
on current research regarding children's issuesCfor example, findings
on the effects of poverty and of changes in welfare policies on
the well-being of children and their families. Other foundations
provide additional funding.
Meeghan
E. V. Prunty, Director, Children and the Media Program, Children
Now.
Center
for Media Education, Washington, DC. Public education and
advocacy on behalf of children's interests in the electronic media.
Two years, $400,000.
The
Center for Media Education conducts research, coalition building,
and public education on the quality of electronic media for children
and on telecommunications policies and regulations and their effects
on children. Under grants from the Corporation and other foundations,
the center is helping child advocacy groups in twelve states ensure
universal access to computers, whether in homes or at community
centers, public libraries, and schools. It is monitoring compliance
with Federal Communication Commission rules that require television
stations to air at least three hours a week of educational programming
for children during prime-time hours. It is also organizing support
for safeguards against online advertising and program-related
marketing of products to children.
Kathryn
C. Montgomery, President, or Jeffrey A. Chester, Executive Director,
Center for Media Education.
Lawyers
for Children, Hartford, CT. Advocacy on behalf of abused children
and mediation efforts to prevent violence among children and youth.
One year, $100,000.
Lawyers
for Children was established in 1995 to involve lawyers in corporate
or private practice as advocates for children. Its focus is on
two subjects: child abuse and youth-on-youth violence. In the
first area, lawyers are trained to represent abused or neglected
children in court proceedings. In the second area, lawyers receive
training in conflict resolution and peer-based mediation and go
on to teach these techniques to middle school faculty and student
mediators. In addition to creating a nationwide network of local
affiliates, Lawyers for Children is collaborating with the Yale
Child Study Center to develop a training curriculum and provide
consultations for participating lawyers.
Lesley
D. Mara, Executive Director, Lawyers for Children.
DISCRETIONARY
GRANTS
Alliance
for Young Families, Boston, MA
Toward evaluation of adolescent health services in Massachusetts,
$25,000
American
Association for the Advancement of Science, Washington, DC
Toward outreach activities for a children's science radio program,
$25,000
Association
of ScienceBTechnology Centers Incorporated, Washington, DC
For research on preservice teacher training partnerships among
science museums, institutions of higher education, and schools,
$25,000
University
of California, Berkeley, CA
Toward planning a center on educational research on diversity
and school reform, $25,000
Columbia
University, New York, NY
For dissemination of reports on the future of American social
policy, $14,300
Families
and Work Institute, New York, NY
Toward publications and dissemination of a report on brain research
and early childhood development, $25,000
Fordham
University, Bronx, NY>Toward a national meeting on community
schools, $10,000
GlobaLearn,
New Haven, CT
For evaluation and evaluation design of interactive educational
expeditions for students and teachers on the World Wide Web, $15,900
Los
Angeles Educational Partnership, Los Angeles, CA
Toward support of a program to improve science education in the
Los Angeles public schools, $25,000
Marylhurst
College, Marylhurst, OR
For preparation and dissemination of science curriculum materials
for Head Start teachers, $25,000
Mathematical
Association of America, Washington, DC
Toward development of a network to expand intervention projects
in mathematics for minority students in middle and high school,
$25,000
University
of Minnesota Foundation, Minneapolis, MN
Toward support of the Jane Goodall Institute's Center for Primate
Studies, $22,000
Montefiore
Medical Center, Bronx, NY
As a final grant toward the School Health Policy Initiative, $25,000
National
Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC
Toward a planning meeting on safety and security of adolescents,
$25,000
National
Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC
Toward a symposium on science education reform, $25,000
National
Conference of State Legislatures, Denver, CO
For a project on the relevance of new research on early childhood
development for state legislatures, $25,000
National
Governors' Association Center for Best Practices, Washington,
DC
Toward a meeting for state policymakers on meeting the needs of
young children, $25,000
National
Indian School Board Association, Polson, MT
For planning further reforms in Indian schools, $25,000
National
Institute for Dispute Resolution, Washington, DC
For a conference for educators in conflict resolution and bias
reduction, $25,000
National
Middle School Association, Columbus, OH
For development of public education materials on middle school
reform, $24,000
New
England Medical Center, Boston, MA
Toward dissemination of a career awareness program for middle
grade school students, $25,000
New
York University, New York, NY
For planning education reform strategies for preschools and elementary
schools, $25,000
New
York University, New York, NY
For education reform strategies for preschools and elementary
schools, $25,000
Laura
Sessions Stepp, Arlington, VA
Toward research and writing on parents and young adolescents in
the United States, $25,000