FRANKFORT, Ky. -- Una nueva coalición estatal quiere que las escuelas y las comunidades se enfoquen en la educación y que cuiden a los estudiantes.
El Centro de Kentucky por Niñas y Niños Saludables (Kentucky Coalition for Healthy Children), formado por más de dos docenas de organizaciones durante la pandemia, quiere promover políticas y programas que reconozcan cómo afectan los eventos adversos a la salud social y emocional de la niñez, así como otros problemas de salud para jóvenes, como diabetes, obesidad, hambre y salud mental.
Allison Adams está con la Fundación por un Kentucky Saludable (Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky), la organización que encabeza esfuerzo. Dice que las escuelas son un punto de arranque para abordar las inequidades en salud y educación.
"Para algunos estudiantes, si no pueden estar en la escuela, podrian pasar hambre. Y tambien es donde reciben servicios de consejeria. Confiamos mucho en los sistemas de la escuela para mucho mas que solo educar ninos."
Los datos más recientes de America Health Rankings (Clasificación de la Salud en América), muestra que más del 25 por ciento de niñas y niños en Kentucky experimentaron dos o más eventos parecidos en 2017 y 2019, incluyendo violencia doméstica, abuso físico y sexual, tener padres o madres que pasado tiempo en prisión, discriminación racial y divorcio de sus padres, entre otros.
Adams cree que la coalición proporcionará espacio para grupos de defensoría y miembros de la comunidad para compartir experiencias e información, identificar soluciones posibles y movilizar esfuerzos de defensoría.
"Conforme preguntamos y ponemos mas en educacion, en maestros, superintendentes y directores en nuestras escuelas, tambien tenemos que estar dispuestos a mantenerlos. No podemos solo estarles pidiendo que hagan cosas y no darles los fondos, el cambio de politica."
Dice que la pandemia ha establecido niveles sin precedentes de trauma y estrés en la infancia y las familias, y dice que cuando los pequeños retornen a la escuela regular, los educadores necesitarán nuevas estrategias.
"Acostumbrabamos hacer la pregunta, ¿que te pasa? Y realmente queremos que nuestros adultos que estan interactuando con nuestros pequenos para cambiar la mentalidad y decir: ¿Que te paso?" mientras tratas de entender de donde viene el ninos, para que podamos encontrarlo estan."
Más información sobre la Coalición de Kentucky pro Niños Saludables (Kentucky Coalition for Healthy Children), en kentuckyhealthychildren.org.
Disclosure: Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky (Fundación a favor de un Kentucky Saludable) contribuye a nuestro fondo para reportar problemas de la Infancia, problemas de salud, prevención del tabaquismo. Si usted quisiera ayudar a sostener las noticias de interés público,
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New York's 2025 budget creates universal access to the Free Application for Federal Student Aid program.
School districts statewide will have the resources to help high schoolers complete the application. Those who do not fill it out must sign a waiver stating they know of the available aid but are not pursuing it.
Sen. Andrew Gounardes, D-Sunset Park, the bill's sponsor, said FAFSA's required information can be daunting.
"Some students or some families are well-prepared and well-equipped to review that document and provide that information; some students might not be," Gounardes acknowledged. "Some students might not even know where to turn to get that information, especially if they're the first in their family to pursue college if they're the first generation here."
Some schools have moved closer to charging $100,000 a year for tuition, which Gounardes said can deter students from considering college. But through the FAFSA process, scholarships and grants can provide enough to shave the number down to a more reasonable figure. A Sallie Mae report showed college spending is up as families spend close to $28,000 each year on college.
Feedback for the proposal was positive, considering most high school seniors who complete the FAFSA are likely to go to college after graduation. Gounardes argued the state can build on the progress by reviewing admissions practices to ensure they are fair and do not exclude students from certain backgrounds.
"In particular, I think it's high time we end legacy admissions," Gounardes emphasized. "There's no reason why we should have affirmative action for privileged kids in New York state, especially from institutions that receive significant public dollars either for grants or construction or awards or this or that or whatever."
He introduced a bill ending legacy admissions, which is still in committee. Among public and private colleges in New York, 42% still consider legacy applicants for admissions.
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More than 70% of adults with student loans report having delayed at least one significant life event because of their debt situation, yet a new Lumina Foundation-Gallup poll shows few Americans seem to understand the cost of obtaining a bachelor's degree.
During the 2021-22 academic year, the average cost of attendance ranged from $10,000 per year at public two-year institutions to more than $56,000 per year at private four-year nonprofit colleges.
Michele Scott Taylor, Ph.D - is president of College Now Greater Cleveland, a nonprofit that works to increase higher education accessibility.
She said for students who are potentially first-generation college goers or from lower socio-economic backgrounds, the conversations around college affordability can be overwhelming.
"The issue for that subset of the population is really around helping them understand what college costs, but then more importantly, how do I afford it?" said Taylor. "What are the ways in which that I could afford whatever that cost might be? "
The poll found that more than half of never-enrolled and previously enrolled adults say cost is a "very important" reason why they have not enrolled or re-enrolled in college.
Unenrolled adults across race, age and first-generation potential students consistently rate tuition cost as the most important factor in their decision to not pursue a college degree.
Taylor said more efforts should also go toward helping students persist and complete their degree, once they've signed up for those loans.
She said higher-education institutions could work better with college access organizations to communicate their programs and offerings in ways that are enticing to get students to want to enroll.
"We want them to show better their return on investment," said Taylor. "We want them to be a little bit more transparent about the cost and what the costs entail."
Data from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center shows that in the 2022-2023 academic year, the number of undergraduate degree earners nationwide fell for the second year in a row.
Support for this reporting was provided by Lumina Foundation.
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Leaders of a teachers' union in Louisiana are voicing concerns about a package of bills they say would have the effect of dissolving labor unions in the state.
The list includes House Bill 571, which would prohibit public agencies from paying union workers for the time they do anything union-related, even if it's on paid leave.
If passed, said Roberto Furtado, a special-education teacher in the Jefferson Parish Public School System, the bills would end collective bargaining and prohibit payroll deductions for union dues. Furtado said all this would make it harder for new teachers to join the union, further silencing their voices.
"If they make it more difficult for the new teachers, young teachers, to get involved," he said, "then basically, it's a roadblock so they're probably more than likely going to just not do it."
House Bill 572 would prohibit public agencies from collective bargaining with unions, except for police and firefighters. Similar bills have been introduced in multiple states by conservative groups.
The teachers' union has posted petitions on its website for teachers to sign and send to their lawmakers.
Educators in Louisiana have said they're dealing with low pay, overcrowded classrooms and school safety issues. However, state lawmakers have advanced a budget proposal that would cut teacher pay, and the House Appropriations Committee forwarded a spending plan that reduces a $2,000 pay stipend teachers got this school year to $1,300 next year.
Furtado said the end result is forcing good teachers out of the profession.
"Teachers are an invaluable resource for our community, and so we need good, well-rounded educators that want to be there and continue their jobs to help these young men and women, because again, they are our future," he insisted. "That's kind of corny to say this, but yes, our children are our future. If you don't take care of them, where does our future lie?"
The legislative committee also allocated $25 million for a differential teacher compensation strategy for the second year in a row. The union opposed the strategy, because it said the raises wouldn't be permanent and could be taken away from year to year.
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