NSLA seeks to: Use data to make the case for increased access Drive quality at scale Connect summer learning to K-12 education.

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NSLA seeks to:• Use data to make the case for increased access• Drive quality at scale• Connect summer learning to K-12 education

Why Summer Matters

“It may seem counterintuitive, but schools don’t seem to produce much of the disparity in test scores between high- and low-income students…

There is some evidence that achievement gaps between high- and low-income students actually narrow during the nine-month school year, but they widen again in the summer months.”

Source: Sean Reardon, No Rich Child Left Behind, New York Times Op-Ed, April 30, 2013.

School Year vs. Summer

Faucet Theory: learning and health resources are turned on for all youth during the school year because of equal access to public education.

FOOD

BOOKS

TEACHERS

ACTIVI

TIES

School Year vs. Summer During the summer, the faucet is turned OFF

for low-income youth. A limited flow of resources in the summer has

major implications for summer program quality.

Lack of Summer Learning Widens the Achievement Gap

Students from high and medium income families continue to advance during the summer while low-income students take steps backwards.

Summer Learning Loss is Cumulative

Summer learning loss makes a substantial contribution to the achievement gap.

Today, just more than 1/3 of low-income youth are participating in a summer learning opportunity, and many of those opportunities are not designed to prevent summer learning loss.

7

Summer Learning Works High-quality summer learning programs have been

shown to improve reading and math skills, school attachment, motivation, relationships with adults and peers

Voluntary, mandatory, center-based and at-home models have all been proven to work

High-quality is well defined Summer learning is cost effective and targeted

Compelling Results & Research

Pre-K Summer Melt Health/Nutrition America After 3pm Parents Summer Learning Demonstration Project

Two Ends of the Spectrum Pre-K summer learning: Houston and Oakland among

cities expanding access The “Summer Melt:” 30% of low-income youth who

are accepted to college ultimately do not enroll• Those with counseling and support in the summer enroll at

higher rates• First Lady’s new Reach Higher initiative is focused on this

issue

Summer Health and Nutrition Harvard meta analysis published in June’s Preventing Chronic

Disease Studies recorded body composition measurements before

and after summer vacation among children 5 to 17 years old. Key Finding: Children gained weight up to twice as fast in the

summer months, particularly children who: had already reached adolescence; were black or Hispanic; or had struggled with excess weight during the prior academic year.

Previous studies have shown that children who participate in organized summer activities are least likely to be obese (Mahoney, 2009)

Summer Health and Nutrition Food Research Action Center found that

nationally only 15% of children who access free or reduced price meals in the school year have access to them in the summer (Hunger Doesn’t Take a Vacation, 2014)

This number is up slightly (+161,000 children nationally) for the first time a decade

New Research on AccessThe Afterschool Alliance will release this week the results from its America After 3pm: Special Report on Summer national survey. Key findings include: 1/3 of families reported that at least one child participated in

a summer learning opportunity, up from 25% in 2009 More than half of families want their children to participate,

and 86% support public funding for summer learning 13% reported their program was no cost, but the average cost

was $250 per week, placing summer learning out of reach for many families

These data are embargoed until 10am Eastern on Thursday, July 17, 2014. Visit afterschoolalliance.org for details.

Parents on Summer Learning Research shows that most parents don’t understand

the problem of summer learning loss and do not prioritize reading for their children in the summer (2014 Harris Interactive Poll for Reading is Fundamental)• 60% do not believe their children experience summer

learning loss• Only 17% think reading is a summer priority

Summer learning is still stigmatized, particularly for low-income youth

Parents do better when they know better

Forthcoming Research Fall/Winter 2014: Wallace Foundation

Summer Learning Demonstration Project• First wave of impact findings from 5-city summer

learning demonstration project for 4th and 5th grade students

• Measuring academic and non-academic gains during the summer and in the school year for participants and a randomized control group

Questions to Consider How are programs and systems engaging and

equipping parents on summer learning? Access/Scale: How are communities meeting children

and families where they are with services?• Lunch at the Library• School Libraries• Book Distributions• Cities of Learning (Online and In-Person)• Public Housing and Rec Center partnerships

Questions to Consider How are community partnerships creating

stronger, more sustainable programs? How are school districts using summer

learning to train and retain teachers?

Resources from RAND and Wallace

Making Summer CountLiterature Review and Best Practices from Summer Learning Research

Getting to Work on Summer LearningLessons learned from Summer Learning Demonstration Project in Five School Districts

Hallmarks of Quality Individualized/Personalized Learning Intentional focus- meeting an identified need Small-group instruction Focus on attendance and retention (youth and staff) Involvement of credentialed teachers Community engagement Deep focus on skill-building and mastery Strong program culture

THANK YOU!

Contact:

Sarah Pitcock, CEONational Summer Learning Association410-856-1370 ext. 404sarah@summerlearning.org

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