The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Downey

- Photos by Alyssa Pointer / alyssa.pointer@ajc.com

A landmark 2018 study found family and home life are the most critical influences in a child’s success. “If you want to forecast children’s achievemen­t outcomes, the best predictor is family income,” said Robert Pianta, study author and founding director of the Center for Advanced Study of Teaching and Learning at the University of Virginia. “It is the family factors that carry the day.”

So what does that mean for public policy? It demands a coherent and focused learning agenda that begins before kids arrive at kindergart­en and that is sustained through college. It means addressing not only the child’s academic struggles in school, but the family’s struggles at home. This is not something schools can accomplish on their own.

We can’t isolate children’s performanc­e in school from where they live, the medical care they receive, the income their families earn or the daily stresses they endure. These systematic challenges must be dealt with across government agencies and community services in a new and intentiona­l way.

“We spend a lot of time mapping the human condition,” said the Atlanta Regional Commission’s Mike Carnathan at the recent United Way’s State of the Children review. “You can map health conditions. You can map education. You can map poverty. You can map housing affordabil­ity. It all looks the same. It is the same map.”

Carnathan described the “tsunami of diversity” that has occurred in metro school districts in two decades. In 2000, almost half of the public school population was white. White students now represent 28% of the enrollment. In 2000, about 12% of neighborho­ods were considered high poverty, which means having a 20% poverty rate or higher. Now, 28% of neighborho­ods fall into that category.

In many of those impoverish­ed communitie­s, schools represent the one institutio­n that is durable, so they’ve shouldered the burden of demographi­c and economic shifts that have left families in disarray.

“We have left a lot at the feet of our school systems — our responsibi­lity for correcting generation upon generation of neglect in underserve­d communitie­s. That’s a bar too much for schools,” said Ken Zeff, a former Fulton County School System leader now heading Learn4Life, a collaborat­ion of the Metro Atlanta Chamber, the Atlanta Regional Commission, the Community Foundation for Greater Atlanta and the United Way of Greater Atlanta.

Learn4Life seeks to improve outcomes for the 606,000 students in Atlanta, Gwinnett, Fulton, DeKalb, Clayton and Cobb. All told, those districts have added 35,000 students over the past five to 10 years, many of whom come from poor households where English is not the native language.

While many community groups have sought to help schools, UVA’s Pianta describes those efforts as “tons of these partnershi­ps and one-off programs” that are often irregular or intermitte­nt and not tied into curriculum and learning.

“We all need to row in the same direction,” said Zeff. “These challenges are beyond just education, which is why they require community-level solutions. The strength of collective impact organizati­ons like Learn4Life is to organize our energy and resources around a common set of goals to scaleprove­n solutions.”

At a recent Learn4Life panel featuring local superinten­dents, Clayton Schools school chief Morcease J. Beasley explained, “I am not looking for partners who come thinking they’re coming to save a community. We are not looking for saviors. We are looking for people who understand that we benefited from a system and it is incumbent upon us, those who are privileged and benefited, to remove the obstacles so others can benefit.”

 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? To help more students achieve success, like these recent Georgia State University graduates, more help is needed from beyond school walls.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM To help more students achieve success, like these recent Georgia State University graduates, more help is needed from beyond school walls.
 ??  ?? A jubilant Clark Atlanta University graduate high-steps into the future after receiving her degree during the school’s 30th annual commenceme­nt ceremony Monday in Atlanta.
A jubilant Clark Atlanta University graduate high-steps into the future after receiving her degree during the school’s 30th annual commenceme­nt ceremony Monday in Atlanta.
 ??  ?? Clark Atlanta University Valedictor­ian Keymani Reid receives a hug from Interim President Lucille Mauge after receiving his degree.
Clark Atlanta University Valedictor­ian Keymani Reid receives a hug from Interim President Lucille Mauge after receiving his degree.
 ??  ?? Former Tallahasse­e Mayor and candidate for Florida governor Andrew Gillum (left) takes a selfie with a graduate at Clark Atlanta’s commenceme­nt ceremony.
Former Tallahasse­e Mayor and candidate for Florida governor Andrew Gillum (left) takes a selfie with a graduate at Clark Atlanta’s commenceme­nt ceremony.
 ??  ?? A graduate sports a money wreath along with graduation regalia during Clark Atlanta University’s ceremony at Panther Stadium on Monday.
A graduate sports a money wreath along with graduation regalia during Clark Atlanta University’s ceremony at Panther Stadium on Monday.
 ??  ?? A decorated mortar board brightens Clark Atlanta University’s 30th annual commenceme­nt ceremony.
A decorated mortar board brightens Clark Atlanta University’s 30th annual commenceme­nt ceremony.

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