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STEM and Expanded Learning in Providence N ATIONAL A CADEMY OF E NGINEERING N ATIONAL R ESEARCH C OUNCIL — B OARD ON S CIENCE E DUCATION Committee on Integrated.

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Presentation on theme: "STEM and Expanded Learning in Providence N ATIONAL A CADEMY OF E NGINEERING N ATIONAL R ESEARCH C OUNCIL — B OARD ON S CIENCE E DUCATION Committee on Integrated."— Presentation transcript:

1 STEM and Expanded Learning in Providence N ATIONAL A CADEMY OF E NGINEERING N ATIONAL R ESEARCH C OUNCIL — B OARD ON S CIENCE E DUCATION Committee on Integrated STEM Education Washington, D.C. July 11, 2012

2 Expanded Learning Opportunities in Rhode Island: Intentionally building toward grade-level, college, and career readiness Building on the shared belief that quality learning can happen anytime, anywhere Focusing on and assess a broad set of youth outcomes – social, emotional, creative, civic, academic Linking school and community educators as equal partners in the teaching and learning process Incorporating youth voice, choice, and inquiry Blending intellectual rigor with real-world relevance, utilizing informal settings Requiring investments in a system of cross- sector planning and shared leadership DRAFT: November 30, 2011 What are the essential characteristics? Strengthening family connections to youth learning

3 School-facilitated:  Focus primarily on academic outcomes  Led primarily by school staff; can incorporate community- led activities Blended:  Focus on academic and broader outcomes simultaneously  Led jointly by community educators and teachers, following intensive planning Community-facilitated:  Focus on an array of social, emotional and learning outcomes  Led primarily by community educators, with an emphasis on experiential learning What are the primary options ? Community- Facilitated School- Facilitated Blended DRAFT: November 30, 2011 Expanded Learning Opportunities in Rhode Island: Creatively bridging the ways youth learn to create a full day, full year of learning

4 The Providence Context: Building on the success of the AfterZones – 44% of middle school youth citywide voluntarily participating in “campuses” of after-school activities – Mixture of sports, arts, and skill- building; over 50% of participants are boys – Above average #s of students with IEPs, who are English language learners, are in violation of attendance policy, and who are free/reduced lunch – Statistically significant impact: Attendance and tardiness Physical activity Connection to school and adults Important academic outcomes 4

5 AfterZone Outcomes Public/Private Ventures Quasi-Experimental AfterZone Evaluation 2-year findings On average, relative to comparison youth, AfterZone participants: Had 25% fewer school absences Had math grades that were one-half grade higher (e.g., a B- to a B+) Those who attend 32 or more days of the AfterZone per year: Had higher scores on state standardized math test Had higher math, ELA and science GPA Reported greater school connectedness Those who report high levels of engagement in the AfterZone: Thought more about their future Had better social skills Demonstrated more positive behavior

6 Ongoing youth development programs led by educators taking part in professional learning communities defining essential learning skills / strategies; includes high-quality STEM, English language arts, and academic skill-building curricula implemented by AmeriCorps members On-going programs with defined curricula in arts, sports, and general skill-building Programs jointly designed and led by community educators and classroom teachers, with academic components woven into hands-on exploration Youth Development Programs Inquiry-Based Programs Blended Practice “AfterZone Scholars” – Summer –School Year) Expanded Learning Elements for Providence Middle Schools Nationally recognized model serving as the central experience and lynchpin for expanded learning efforts

7 www.mypasa.org The Critical Components Distilling the essential elements of inquiry-based training Program Quality Assessment and coaching (Weikart Center, Ypsilanti, MI) Communities of Practice (David Kolb, Experiential Learning) Critical higher education partnerships (RI College, RI STEM Center, RI EPSCoR) Co-inquiry and pre-service teacher preparation (Robert Tai, University of Virginia)

8 High School Expanded Learning Opportunities “Learning happens anytime, anywhere (…for credit toward graduation).”

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11 Patrick Duhon Director of Expanded Learning patrick.duhon@ppsd.org 401-241-6202 mobile www.mypasa.org www.hubprov.com www.youtube.com/mypasaorg


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