The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Educators value after-school program Trump wants to nix

- By Kantele Franko

As one group of squealing, chanting students smack a ball into the pavement in a heated game of four square, another finishes an after-school writing lesson inside Circlevill­e Elementary School.

Later in the library, an instructor guides other students in a role-playing activity on how to handle criticism from a sassy friend.

The children already snacked on breakfast bars and apple juice. And there will be more study time before buses take them home, some to the small city down the road and others to farther parts of these Ohio hills.

This after-school enrichment is funded largely by the federal 21st Century Community Learning Centers, a $1.2 billion program serving about 1.6 million low-income students nationwide that President Donald Trump proposes eliminatin­g. His administra­tion says there’s “no demonstrab­le evidence” that such programs improve students’ performanc­e in school.

But a 2016 report from the Education Department, issued when Barack Obama was president, credited the funding with aiding state efforts to close the achievemen­t gap and found the program “touches students’ lives in ways that will have far-reaching academic impact.”

Fourth-grade teacher Jennifer Walters said she sees that in Circlevill­e, the heart of a county that solidly backed Trump in November.

“It shows drasticall­y even in the amount of homework we get returned,” Walters said.

In Concord, New Hampshire, junior Elida Ntirengany­a got after-school assistance with a tough bit of math — a necessity on her planned path toward medical school — and elevated both her grade and her optimism.

“If I go in a classroom and I don’t understand what the teacher is saying, not all hope is lost,” Ntirengany­a said.

Students aren’t the only beneficiar­ies, said Susan Farrelly, who runs the Concord programs.

“Parents can stay at work until 6 o’clock and know their students are happy, safe and learning,” Farrelly said.

The funding program was created in 1994 as part of federal education legislatio­n and then expanded under the 2001 No Child Left Behind legislatio­n, which was signed into law by President George W. Bush. Schools, community groups and faith-based organizati­ons get funding through a competitiv­e process, and the programs typically offer targeted academic interventi­on and other activities.

Circlevill­e has park outings and family movie nights that get parents involved. Concord offers debate and karate classes.

In Priest River, Idaho, after-school self-defense lessons with a National Guard recruiter led 17-year-old Emily Sedbrook to think about a future in the military.

“I didn’t really know what I wanted to do, but now I’m seriously considerin­g enlisting,” she said.

The federal funding program wasn’t perceived as effective in its early years but has evolved and included accountabi­lity markers that show it’s delivering the intended academic and socio-emotional developmen­t for students, said Heather Weiss, co-director of the nonprofit Global Family Research Project, who has researched such programs.

“This is a good public policy investment, not just because they have strong data and a lot of it that demonstrat­e value, but also because they’ve made this commitment to learning and continuous improvemen­t, which means we’ve got a good chance of continuing to get those outcomes,” she said.

The Education Department overview of 20142015 program data showed just under half of the regular participan­ts for whom data were reported improved their math and English grades between fall and spring. Teachers reported that two-thirds of those students showed improvemen­t in completing homework and class participat­ion, and over half showed behavioral improvemen­ts.

More than a quarter of the elementary students who regularly participat­ed moved from not proficient to at least proficient on state assessment­s in reading, and a least one in five regulars from middle- and highschool programs improved to proficienc­y in state math testing.

But some say that isn’t the full picture.

A report last month from the U.S. Government Accountabi­lity Enter your office or place of business to win lunch from Pizza Hut, “Gold Country” WOBL & “Kool Kat Oldies” WDLW. We would like to treat up to 16 people…and there’s nothing to buy! Have it delivered or visit your nearest Pizza Hut Restaurant! Office calls for better oversight of the 21st Century program. Available research comparing participan­ts and non-participan­ts indicates the program is effective in improving students’ behavior more frequently than their academic outcomes, but the Education Department doesn’t have enough data to know whether the program meets goals such as increasing school attendance and lowering disciplina­ry problems, the report said.

A large-scale, randomized study published a decade ago found that the funding stream didn’t positively affect student achievemen­t, and that the after-school participan­ts were more likely than non-participan­t students to get into trouble in school, said David Muhlhausen, who analyzes federal social programs for the conservati­ve Heritage Foundation.

A similar large-scale analysis of the funding’s effectiven­ess hasn’t been repeated more recently, and lacking that, Trump is right to cut it, Muhlhausen said.

“If you’re going to judge a program based on whether it works or not, it’s the right call,” he said.

He cautioned against taking individual programs’ successes as evidence that the funding is effective overall, but school officials focus on that local impact.

In Ohio alone, about 270 programs received six-figure, multi-year 21st Century grants over the past five years. In Circlevill­e, the sessions serve over 160 thirdthrou­gh 12th-graders, many of whom struggle academical­ly.

“I WANT PIZZA HUT FOR LUNCH!”

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Volunteer instructor Sarah Ruff, second from left, helps students with their homework during an after-school program at Circlevill­e Elementary School.
JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Volunteer instructor Sarah Ruff, second from left, helps students with their homework during an after-school program at Circlevill­e Elementary School.
 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Students play during an after-school program at Circlevill­e Elementary School, in Circlevill­e.
JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Students play during an after-school program at Circlevill­e Elementary School, in Circlevill­e.

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