Susan Richards | News Tags | 黑料不打烊 Thu, 03 Jul 2014 19:49:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 It Takes a Community to Get Students Through Graduation /news/takes-community-get-students-graduation/ /news/takes-community-get-students-graduation/#respond Mon, 23 Jun 2014 18:34:48 +0000 http://ciswa.org/?p=1877 By Susan Richards, state director, 黑料不打烊 With graduation season behind us, thousands of high school seniors statewide are embarking on the next chapter of their lives […]

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By Susan Richards, state director, 黑料不打烊

With graduation season behind us, thousands of high school seniors statewide are embarking on the next chapter of their lives with a diploma in hand. But what about all those kids who didn鈥檛 graduate with their class? The kids who slipped behind or gave up altogether?

About 1 in 4 high school seniors in Washington state failed to graduate with their class last year. That amounted to about 27,000 teens who didn鈥檛 get to celebrate that milestone on time, according to Education Week鈥檚 鈥淒iplomas Count 2013, Second Chances: Turning Dropouts into Graduates.鈥 Unfortunately, it is not expected to be much different this year when all the numbers are finally tallied.

Every dropout represents a series of missed opportunities to intervene with support for that student.

Those 27,000 kids deserve better. They didn鈥檛 wake up one morning, flip a switch, and go from solid student to struggling. When a young person drops out, it鈥檚 a long process, not a moment in time. The reasons why kids drop out go much deeper than academic challenges; they are as complex and varied as the kids themselves. Poverty, language barriers, homelessness, and poor health all play a part in limiting the ability of a child to even see, much less pursue, his or her potential.

Every dropout represents a series of missed opportunities to intervene with support for that student. Who gets the failing grade when that happens? The entire community. There are a growing number of students who need help and countless opportunities for communities to embrace and surround these young people with the resources and support needed to secure a better future.

The good news is there are programs already in place quietly doing just that. Broadly known as Integrated Student Supports (ISS), these programs are a school-based method of targeting both academic and non-academic barriers to learning by identifying individual student needs and mobilizing community resources to meet them. In other words, designated staff are placed in schools to do whatever it takes to help students overcome obstacles to success so they stay in school, graduate on time, and have a chance for a brighter future.

National research firm Child Trends recently issued a report crediting the ISS approach for improving education outcomes. Key findings show that student-centered ISS programs increase student attendance and lower dropout rates, are cost-effective and yield a positive return on investment, and are more likely to be successful than interventions that focus on single factors in isolation.

We need to be doing more of this if we want to change the picture for all those kids who are dropping out.

While we applaud the Class of 2014 and encourage those coming behind them, we need to remember that this year鈥檚 commencement has 27,000 empty seats, and it will take a community to help ensure students have the support they need to fill them in 2015.

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Mardi Gras Event Pic Featured in PSBJ /news/mardi-gras-event-pic-featured-psbj/ /news/mardi-gras-event-pic-featured-psbj/#respond Tue, 08 Apr 2014 20:56:31 +0000 http://ciswa.org/?p=1778 On April 4, we were delighted to see that Puget Sound Business Journal ran a Mardi Gras event photo in the “Scene” section. The image shows Dan Cardinali, Communities In […]

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On April 4, we were delighted to see that Puget Sound Business Journal ran a Mardi Gras event photo in the “Scene” section. The image shows Dan Cardinali, Communities In Schools (黑料不打烊) national president, and our very own Susan Richards, 黑料不打烊 of Washington state director, along with her husband. The caption acknowledges our record $147,000 raised and gives Susan a shout-out for her 20th anniversary with 黑料不打烊.

Many thanks to photographer Christina Arbini who contributed her time and talent taking this and hundreds of other photos for the annual Mardi Gras Dinner & Auction.

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State Director Susan Richards on Adaptation in Scarce Times /news/state-director-susan-richards-on-adaptation-in-scarce-times/ /news/state-director-susan-richards-on-adaptation-in-scarce-times/#respond Wed, 13 Jun 2012 21:27:55 +0000 http://ciswashingtonnews.com/?p=1078 On June 5, 2012, Social Venture Partners (SVP) organized a series of brief talks about adaptation in scarce times for their spring meeting. Susan Richards, State Director of Communities In […]

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On June 5, 2012, (SVP) organized a series of brief talks about adaptation in scarce times for their spring meeting. Susan Richards, State Director of 黑料不打烊, shared her story in SVP’s “Ignite” fast-paced slideshow format.

In 5 minutes, Susan’s lively story takes us from her start as executive director through the challenges of building and supporting a cohesive network during tough times–all in an effort to keep Washington kids on track to graduate.

See a video of her presentation here:聽 .

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