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Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers
29

Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

Apr 01, 2015

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Aylin Moke
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Page 1: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

Child and Youth Education ServicesSchool Liaison OfficersSchool Liaison Officers

Page 2: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

CYES and the School Liaison Officer

CYES and the School Liaison Officer

An Introduction for ParentsAn Introduction for Parents

Page 3: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

Fast Facts:

1.2 million American children have at least one parent serving on active military duty.

Page 4: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

There are approximately 20,000 active duty dual military families with children.

Fast Facts:

Page 5: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

Fast Facts:

The average military child will experience six to nine transitions during his K-12 school years.

Page 6: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

Fast Facts:

Providing a good education for the children of service members is one of the quality of life issues that affect military readiness and retention.

Page 7: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

Fast Facts:

A military family can be moved with as little as thirty day’s notice.

Page 8: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

Fast Facts:

A average military family moves every 2.9 years. Often a move can include not only a new home and friends, but a new climate, new language, and new school requirements.

Page 9: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

In addition to the many other concerns and burdens that military children have to deal with, transitioning from school to school can present numerous challenges.

School Transitions:

Page 10: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

Things are different from location to location.

• Graduation Requirements • Immunization Requirements • Kindergarten Entrance Age • School Calendars • Entrance and Exit Testing • Course Content and Sequencing • Attendance and Discipline Regulations • Scheduling (block-scheduling, year-round school, 2 vs. 3

semesters…) • Gifted and Special Education Qualification and Services • English as a Second Language Services • Extracurricular Eligibility • National Membership Requirements (i.e. selected for

National Honor Society in one school does not necessarily guarantee membership in another school)

Page 11: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

Some Problems with Transitioning

• Mid-semester transfer (often makes consistency of learning very difficult)

• Transfer of records • Appropriate placement –loss of grade status• Educators unaware of implications of military lifestyle • Meeting new friends & missing old friends• Adjusting to a new place/culture (“fitting in”) • Missing club and sports tryouts

Page 12: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

Transitions can most adversely affect high school students

• Credit transfer

• Grading scales

• Block versus semester schedules

• In-state tuition and admissions issues

• Scholarship eligibility

• High School exit exams

• Graduation requirements

• Grade status requirements

• Loss of “reputation” earned

• Differing course offerings

• Eligibility for extra curricular activities

• Eligibility for academic programs

• Missed tryouts

Page 13: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

School Liaison Officer [SLO]

• SLOs serve as “links” between Navy families and schools on all major Navy installations.

• SLOs specialize in serving military families and offer a wide spectrum of services enabling families to become more involved in their child’s educational experience.

Page 14: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

School Liaison Officers’ Core Services:

1. School Transition Services (PCS Cycle)

2. Deployment Support

3. Special Needs System Navigation

4. Installation, School and Community Communications

5. Partnerships in Education (PIE)

6. Home School Linkage and Support

7. Post-Secondary Preparation

Page 15: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

1.a School Liaison Officers Work with Schools to Ease Transitions

Partner with districts to implement best practices that level the playing field for mobile military children

Provide training opportunities for educators to assist children in transition

Connect schools to command and the military community

Facilitate ambassador and newcomer programs

Page 16: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

1.b School Liaison Officers Work with Families to Ease

Transitions

Provide information

Assist parents in becoming better advocates for their children

Connect families to resources

Assist with registration challenges

Page 17: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

2. Deployment Support

Provide training opportunities for teachers

Facilitate programs to connect schools, children, and deployed sailors

Educate parents about resources and practices that help children cope with separations

Facilitate Military Family Life Consultant program in local schools

Page 18: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

3. Special Needs System Navigation

Serve as a link between EDIS, EFMP, Schools, Parents, and Command

Provide resource information for families of special needs children

Educate families about the IEP Process

Teach parents how to better advocate for their special needs child

Page 19: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

4. Installation, School, and Community Communications

Act as primary advisor to Command on matters relating to schools

Serve as installation subject matter expert for Youth Education, Transition, K-12 School, and Deployment issues

Inform and advise commanders and parents on student education issues

Link schools with installation resources and support

Provide support and assistance to families with school concerns

Page 20: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

5. Partnerships in Education

PIE creates a volunteer network of resources to support installation and community members who have a vested interest in the success of all youth.

Page 21: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

6. Home School Linkage and Support

Help home school families indentify local support groups, opportunities, and activities

Provide resources with information on local laws regulations and policies on home schooling

Serve as a link between home school families and base agencies

Page 22: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

7. Post-Secondary Preparation

Provide high school students access to resources and information on scholarships and in-state admission and tuition eligibility

Share information on military specific scholarships and opportunities with school guidance counselors and students

Support high school career and college events

Share SAT/ACT resources

Page 23: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

What a School Liaison Officer

is NOT: Not a school employee

Not a police officer

Not a school superintendent

Not a doctor

Not a lawyer

Not a Service Member

Page 24: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

When do I contact the School Liaison Officer?

Page 25: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

Prior to Your Arrival

The SLO will provide you with education information for your new installation , answer your questions, help with enrollment challenges and help pave your way to a SMOOOTH transition!!

CONTACT THESLO

Page 26: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

While Stationed at the Installation

Contact the SLO for assistance with problems at school, scholarship info, special needs, home schooling, etc.

CONTACT THESLO

Page 27: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

When Preparing to Depart

• Contact local SLO for information and resources that will help you prepare for your move

• Access NEW SLO at next duty station to get school information BEFORE you depart

CONTACT THESLO

Page 28: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

How Do I Find My School Liaison Officer?

For a worldwide listing of Navy School Liaison Officers go to

www.cnic.navy.mil/cyp

For duty at other branch of service installations, contact a Regional Navy SLO for local SLO information or go to

www.militaryk12partners.dodea.edu

Page 29: Child and Youth Education Services School Liaison Officers.

QUESTIONS