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In Focus on the Wonder Years: Challenges Facing the American Middle
School five authors, experts in education reform, offer ways of
tackling these issues: reassessing the organization of grades K-12;
specifically assisting the students most in need; finding ways to
prevent disciplinary problems; working with proven
professional-development models; helping parents understand the
school's goals and methods and how they can help their children
learn at home; and exploring how other countries promote the
well-being of and provide positive school climates for students of
comparable age to support academic achievement.
RAND is conducting a longitudinal study that evaluates the
effectiveness of voluntary summer learning programs in reducing
summer learning loss, which contributes substantially to the
achievement gap between low- and higher-income students. Based on
evaluations of programs in six school districts, this second report
in a series provides research-based advice for school district
leaders as they create and strengthen summer programs.
Research has shown that students skills and knowledge often
deteriorate during the summer months, with low-income students
facing the largest losses. School districts and summer programming
providers can benefit from the lessons learned by other programs in
terms of developing strategies to maximize program effectiveness
and quality, student participation, and strategic partnerships and
funding.
This study documents actions of Wallace Foundation grantees to
create more-cohesive policies and initiatives to improve
instructional leadership in schools; describes how states and
districts have worked together to forge such policies and
initiatives; and examines the hypothesis that cohesive systems
improve school leadership. Such efforts appear to be a promising
approach to developing school principals engaged in improving
instruction.
Initiatives to coordinate schools, cultural institutions,
community-based organizations, foundations, and/or government
agencies to promote access to arts education in and outside of
schools have recently developed. This study looks at the
collaboration efforts of six urban communities: how they started
and evolved, the kinds of organizations involved, conditions that
helped and that hindered coordination, and strategies used.It
examines the efforts of six communities to improve arts education
through coordination across multiple organizations, describing how
the efforts unfolded and documenting the common and unique benefits
and challenges of collaborative approaches.
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