Five Things Friday: Links We Like

For this week’s Five Things Friday we would like to share some of the links we have been sharing this week.

Our first 3 links come from the Second Annual Education Nation Summit here in New York City. We were honored to have the opportunity to play a role in this years summit by joining:

1. CEO and Co-founder Michael Brown speaks on a panel – Going Local: What a City Can Do for its Schools

2. City Year New Program Manager, Dan Lee shares his thoughts from Monday at Education Nation

3. Executive Director of City Year New York, Itai Dinour shares some of the reoccuring themes from this year’s Summit.

Our next two links are from events – one from last week and one that we are still accepting RSVPs for.

4. See an Infograph that shows participation from each state from last weeks “#SaveService Call Day.”

5. Please join us for our Opening Day next Friday.

Staff Spotlight: Nick Martin

This post was originally posted on the A Slice of Life blog and is written by Nick Martin, Recruitment Manager at City Year New York. A Slice of Life is the Official Blog of Syracuse University Career Services and is a way for the university to communicate with SU students and alumni.

My wardrobe mostly consists of Orange t-shirts, not necessarily my favorite color, but an indicator of my Syracuse pride.  At Syracuse University I majored in International Relations, International Security and Diplomacy, with a geographic concentration in the Middle East and a minor in Communications and Rhetorical Studies.  Obviously, I chose my major based on the length of its name.  Joking aside, my addiction to current events and news grew exponentially throughout my college career.  In selecting the major that I did, I made the decision to not turn a blind eye to the many pressing issues we see in our global community every day.

First steps after college…

I finished my degree in International Relations and merged my personal passion for volunteerism into a pursuit of a humanitarian career path.  I committed to a year of service as an AmeriCorps VISTA (Volunteer in Service to America) with the American Red Cross of Massachusetts Bay in Disaster Services.  I worked to improve emergency preparedness efforts and relations in 145 communities through the execution of a strong liaison program with government, volunteer community, and non-profit partners.  I was responsible for leading a team of Red Cross responders in over 26 local disaster scenes, assisting more than 150 individuals with disaster relief services.

The experience stretched me out of my comfort zone, humbled me beyond belief, taught me how to utilize my untamed passion for impactful good and showed me the path I wanted to follow when my year was up and beyond.

Turning My Passion into a Career

My year of service ended in Boston on a Friday and I started at City Year the following Monday in New York City.  I now proudly serve as an Admissions Manager at City Year for a regional team based out of New York.  Every 26 seconds, a student gives up on school in America; we can’t ignore this crisis.  High school dropouts are three times more likely to be unemployed and eight times more likely to be in jail or prison.  I’m propelled by this challenge and more importantly the successes of our efforts.

City Year is a national organization that partners with schools to improve the chances that students will graduate from high school.  We focus on neighborhoods where 50% of the students are at risk for dropping out and have strong evidence our programs are working.  As the Admission Manager I recruit, interview, and hire idealist, 17 to 24 year olds, to give a year of their lives to serve full-time in some of America’s most under-served schools.  We provide critical services like tutoring and after-school programs, giving students the role models they need and making the schools more engaging places to learn.

I share in the City Year founding vision that one day every student will turn to his/her peer and ask the common question, “Where are you doing your year of service?”  I applied to City Year because so many of the ominous issues we see in our global community can be directly tied to education.  I encourage you to answer the call to service and put more Orange in our Red Bombers.

Reflections from Education Nation

Since last Friday,  NBC News hosted a national discussion that explored developments, challenges, and progress in education, as well as identify and explore new, exciting opportunities to reinvent America as an Education Nation. Yesterday we shared Itai Dinour’s reflections from Education Nation. Today, East New York Program Manager Dan Lee is our guest blogger and is sharing his experience at Education Nation.

Last week the Education Nation Experience was open at Rockefeller Center for visitors to learn more about education in America

I had the opportunity to attend the NBC News, Education Nation Summit this past Monday. It was great to hear from so many advocates of public education sharing the specific improvements that can be made to further support teachers, parents, and communities.  From star athletes (Lebron James) to CEOs (Warren Buffett) to teachers to scientists to governors, they all care about the quality of education now and for the future.

The state of education in this nation is an issue for all Americans and there are many reasons why.  Many believe that education is the civil rights issue of this generation and that education reform is crucial to prepare America to compete in the global economy.  Whatever your opinion is, it’s hard to disagree that more needs to be done. Below are a few of the thoughts that I am taking away from my day at Education Nation.

  1. College and workforce readiness starts with early education: Every year more students are entering college or the workforce less prepared.  Early education is important and without a strong start, students begin school at a huge disadvantage. Our mission at City Year is to help end the high school dropout crisis, and our work in elementary and middle schools is preparing students to be on track by the time they reach high school.
  2. Students who are behind need extra help: Melinda Gates mentioned her work at MET Project (Measures of Effective Teaching) which has confirmed that students benefit greatly from one-on-one specialized interventions, “Boy do we need that,” she said. City Year focuses on running scientifically-based intervention programs in literacy and we have also seen evidence that this is effective. Last year, 90% of 3rd through 5th grade students tutored by City Year, across the country, improved raw literacy scores. Boy do we do that.
  3. It takes a village:  “School systems cannot do it by themselves; when the community comes together that is when the magic happens,” said U.S. Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan.  In my role as a Program Manager at City Year New York, I get to see this first hand. When I see students, teachers, administrators, parents, and community based organizations work together it’s a beautiful thing.

One of City Year’s values that seemed ever present at the Summit was, “Students first, collaboration always.” I appreciated being part of such an idealistic approach to spreading knowledge about and around education issues all over America. But, speaking about education isn’t enough; I’ll be looking forward to see what changes for the better are made in the next few years.

Additional note:  My experience at City Year has been a very local and New York-focused.  I had the opportunity to speak with attendees from all across the country who knew all about City Year and our impact.  Many were surprised to find out that I was from New York, and not from their local City Year site -shout out to CYLA; you got quite a few fans out there.

Sessions that I attended:

  • Education Nation Spotlight
  • Brain Power:  Why Early Learning Matters
  • Innovation Spotlight:  Sal Khan | Khan Academy
  • Classrooms in Action:  A Window on Great Teaching
  • Classroom 2025:  The Changing Face of Education
  • The State of Education:  The Governors’ Perspective
  • Innovation Spotlight:  John Hunter | World Peace Game
  • Who’s Getting Graded:  Putting Accountability to the Test

Education Nation: Reoccurring Themes

Today is the final day of the NBC News, Second Annual Education Nation Summit. For the past five days NBC News hosted a national discussion that explored developments, challenges, and progress in education, as well as identify and explore new, exciting opportunities to reinvent America as an Education Nation. City Year was honored and excited to be invited as an attendee and participant in this year’s summit. Today’s Guest Blogger is our Executive Director,  Itai Dinour, who represented City Year New York at the summit.   

For the last two days, I had the opportunity to attend Education Nation, an amazing conversation produced by NBC News. Like last year, I leave the two days of sessions with a greater appreciation for the complexities of what it takes to make schools stronger, but deeply inspired by the community of innovators who are demonstrating what is possible. Most importantly, I walked away with a renewed sense of confidence that the work of the City Year corps members is one key ingredient in the education reform landscape.

Through the plenaries, smaller sessions, and hallway mingling, several themes kept popping up:

  • From politics to action:  As Chancellor Walcott said early in his tenure, we need a sense of civility in the education reform conversation. As compared to last year, the tone of this year’s session was positive, solution oriented and I applaud the organizers for showcasing what works in education. From observing three teachers live in their classrooms, to meeting the next generation of education innovators, to featuring City Year’s partnership with Mayors, NBC was effectively highlighting bright spots.
  • The importance of school culture: From President Clinton, Geoffrey Canada, Diane Ravitch to Cory Booker, many of the thought leaders talked about school culture as a key ingredient for success. Yet clearly, more work needs to happen to understand how to transform both the student and adult culture while effectively integrating parents.
  • Neighborhood based solutions: Throughout several panels, the question of the role of zip codes as a determining factor for a child’s chances for success were debated. As the City Year New York team knows, this is a critical question we wrestle wrestle with as we focus our efforts in four communities yet struggle to determine the best strategy for serving our students as they travel throughout New York City for their high school years. In addition, these conversations reminded me of the important role that community partnerships play, in particular with local stakeholders who can support the holistic needs of students and their families.
  • The ability to use data as an intervention tool: While no perfect system exists (yet), it was reassuring to hear how hungry the education community is to get access to the right student level data that can determine the best interventions. Perhaps by next year’s summit, there will be a more perfect solution that is accessible by educators, community partners, and parents alike.

Thank you again to our partners at NBC Universal, Comcast, and Education Nation for dedicating the time and resources for these crucial conversations and for letting members of the City Year community participate.

I encourage you to check out www.educationnation.com for footage from the summit and to continue the conversation.

Also – please read Itai’s reflections from Day 1 and Day 2 from last year’s Education Nation Summit.