First ever Police Commission-Youth Commission Mtg., 3/7, City Hall, 6pm

WHO: SF Youth Commission and SF Police Commission

WHAT: The Police Commission and Youth Commission are joining together to get YOUR input on youth & police interactions

WHERE: City Hall, Board of Supervisors Legislative Chambers (room 250)

WHEN: Wednesday, March 7, 2012, 6pm

CONTACT: (415) 554-6446 or email at youthcom@sfgov.org.

NOTES: Come to the Youth Commission & Police Commission joint hearing on youth and police interactions! Know your rights & share your testimony with us! We need to hear from youth! KNOW YOUR RIGHTS, SHARE YOUR STORY, CHANGE POLICY!  How have your experiences with police impacted your life? Do you want to see improved police and youth interactions, communication, and relations?

Are you aware of the special policies and procedures (SFPD General Order 7.01) that police must follow when they arrest, interrogate, and detain youth? Come share your stories at the hearing!

3rd Street Action Planning Workshop, 2/23, 6pm, Opera House

WHO: 3rd Street Corridor Project, Renaissance Entrepreneurship Center, Supervisor Cohen, Community stakeholders

WHAT: 3rd Street Action Planning Workshop

WHERE: Bayview Opera House, 4705 Third Street

WHEN: Thursday, February 23rd, 6:00-7:30pm

CONTACT: 415-647-3728

NOTES: Your input will help us identify community concerns and priority actions for the 2012 update of the 3rd Street Action Plan. Issues to be discussed include: community health and safety, streetscape design and physical appearance, neighborhood events and activities, business attractions and promotions, and other issues to improve 3rd Street for residents, merchants, and stakeholders. Come hear updates from Police Captain Chignell and Supervisor Malia Cohen.

BVHP Community Convener Meeting

Please join us for our February Convener Meeting!

“Aim High” Free 5-week Summer Program Applications

(From www.aimhigh.org)

The mission of Aim High is to inspire a life-long love of learning and instill a sense of community, opportunity, and respect so that students are prepared for success in school and life.

Our Summer Program
Aim High is the largest academic summer program provider in the Bay Area, operating campuses in San Francisco, Oakland, Marin County and San Mateo County. The program combines intensive, engaging and challenging academic classes with activities and events that create opportunities for leadership development and community exploration. Students join after 5th or 6th grade, and participate for three or four consecutive summers – at no cost to them or their families. Learn more about our summer
program
.

Our Students
Over the last 25 years, Aim High has changed the lives of over 5,000 low-income youth. By reaching youth during the critical transition from childhood to adulthood, Aim High instills a deep love of learning through an engaging, personalized and supportive summer school program. The key to Aim High’s success is the network of support built around young people over the course of their years in the program. The majority of the youth we serve come from low-income families, live in under-resourced neighborhoods, and will be the first in their families to graduate from college. Learn more about our students.

Our Teachers
Aim High not only prepares students for success in high school and higher education, but is also committed to encouraging talented young adults to serve their communities and to consider teaching as a career. We hire and train hundreds of high school and college students to teach in the summer, and hire experienced teachers who mentor the younger, less experienced teachers in the program. Many of Aim High’s faculty members are graduates of Aim High and serve as powerful role models for our students. Learn more about our teachers.

2012 Student ApplicationAim High is now accepting applications for NEW students to the 2012 summer program!

Summer Program Dates: June 25th – July 27th, 2012
Application Due Date: April 6th, 2012
Decision Letters Mailed Out: May 1st, 2012

SUMMER 2012 SITES

San Francisco

  1. Lick Wilmerding HS; 755 Ocean Ave.; (Ingleside) 6,7,8th Graders
  2. Urban School: 1563 Page St. (The Haight) 6,7,8th Graders
  3. Presidio Middle School; 450 30th Ave. (Richmond) 6,7,8th Graders
  4. Yick Wo Elementary; 2245 Jones St.; (Chinatown) 6,7,8th Graders
  5. SF Community School; 125 Excelsior St. (Excelsior) 5,6,7,8th Graders
  6. ER Taylor School; 423 Burrows St. (Portola) 5,6,7,8th Graders
  7. Mission High School; 3750 18th St. (Mission) 6,7th Graders

Please visit http://aimhigh.org/students/student_application.html for full application!

New Day for Learning Passes Torch on Community Schools: Next Chapter Opens

Originally posted on http://www.newdayforlearning.org/sanfrancisco.html:

On February 21, New Day for Learning will be doing what we were funded to do three years ago – passing the torch to the San Francisco Unified School District so that the Community School work can be fully institutionalized within the district.

The SFUSD will be creating a first-ever position to direct a Community School strategy.  The work inside the district will build on the foundation we have created together.

When I began this work with only a 3 year grant timeline,  I never expected that there could be so much progress in such a short period.

 

Celebration of the Community School Work in San Francisco!

In order to honor the accomplishments of New Day for Learning and to share its future plans, the SFUSD is having a celebratory event on February 14 (yes, it’s Valentine’s Day) from 3pm to 5pm in Nourse Auditorium at 135 Van Ness.  Richard Carranza will be a featured speaker.  Everyone who supports this work is invited to attend.

Please RSVP to cartert@sfusd.edu

We Are Proud of the Work We Have Done Together

  • Introducing the Community School strategy to stakeholders in San Francisco’s education, social service, funding and civic community.  Community Schools are now a centerpiece of the city’s education reform efforts.  New Day’s work has included organizing conferences and making presentations to dozens of diverse groups throughout the City.  We have enlisted experts from around the country to brief policymakers, parent and community organizations, city departments and SFUSD staff; and widely disseminated written materials on SF’s emerging Community School approach.
  • Defining and developing the key elements of the city’s Community School vision and model.  Hundreds of colleagues have been involved in various work groups and committees, including  a Community School Council developed from a New Day design committee and comprised of diverse representatives from city agencies, CBO’s, parents groups, and key folks within the SFUSD from central office and school sites.  Work groups with a cross-section of public and private service providers have developed both an expanded learning model (which we called “linked-day”) and a behavioral health model (which we called the “whole school” approach.) for Community Schools.  Coming out of this work is the definition of the 5 core elements and the 98 specific benchmarks of the SF Community School model.
  • Providing technical support and leadership in making Community Schools a signature of the School Improvement Grant (SIG) process.   When 10 SF schools were identified by the federal and state governments as “persistently low performing,” SFUSD asked New Day to use the foundation we had created and develop a Community School portion for the School Improvement Grants (SIG).  The grants defined and allocated funding for extended learning, parent engagement, community engagement, behavioral health, and a Community School Coordinator in every SIG school.  New Day provided technical assistance for creating this new and crucial position within the SFUSD.
  • Cultivating the development of the Community School approach in the 5 initial “early adopter” schools and in 7 additional School Improvement Grant schools in the Superintendent’s Zone.  We have been busy providing technical assistance at the site level for the past 3 years – working with leadership teams to facilitate planning, designing programs and structures, and brokering partnerships aligned with school goals.  Developing the role of Community School Coordinator, which our city-wide conference targeted as the linchpin of the Community School model, has been an important focus of our work.  This has included developing and facilitating a learning cohort for the Coordinators for the past year.
  • Facilitating the development of a new level of CBO-SFUSD partnership.  The 25 member CBO-SFUSD Advisory Committee has provided a monthly forum for almost 3 years for information exchange, identifying barriers to partnership and the development of new strategies and tools to deepen community-school partnerships.  We are pleased that a new process for co-planning between schools and CBO’s will be introduced district-wide in the coming year.   A pilot study of the new partnership tool is being conducted by New Day’s amazing social work intern, Kendall Jones, in 3 SIG schools.   A video on the exemplary partnerships of some of the participants in the Advisory Committee is in the works – look for it.
  • Building a city-wide focus on summer learning as a key component of education reform by initiating and convening the Summer Learning Network, comprised of over 70 organizations.  The Network has developed a common set of goals for summer, produced 3 professional development conferences involving over 500 practitioners, promoted and gotten passed a city-wide summer learning policy by the Board of Supervisors, and facilitated a resource exchange that has included everything from free MUNI for summer programs to free admissions to the California Academy of Sciences.

A New Commitment to Community Schools in San Francisco

In this photo: Summer Learning Network press event to bring public attention to the achievement gap caused by summer learning loss.

Today the words “Community School” (rarely heard in San Francisco before New Day adopted community schools as its driving strategy) echo throughout the city as stakeholders of all kinds plan their approach to school and community improvement.

The new federal Promise Neighborhood grant in the Mission District, one of only 15 planning grants in the country, centers on the Community School strategy.  The grant would probably not have been awarded unless Community Schools were a focus of the District’s efforts to turn around its lowest performing schools.  In addition, the Choice Neighborhood federal grant that will be used to rebuild housing in Bayview includes 2 new Community School Coordinators – making the San Francisco total of Coordinators equal 14.  And San Francisco is receiving national recognition for making Community Schools a core part of its SIG-funded education reform strategy.  This fall, San Francisco’s Deputy Superintendent was invited and agreed to join the national superintendent’s advisory committee for the Coalition for Community Schools.  And the National Summer Learning Association has targeted SF’s Summer Learning Network as an important strategy that should be replicated in communities throughout the country.

Lessons Learned and Challenges Moving Forward

 

The lessons learned have been numerous and will guide the future work: The importance of building our reform models from the ground up; the significant changes in approach that must be made by both CBO’s and schools to foster true community-school partnerships based on mutual goals; and the magic that an inspired and motivated principal can bring to the work of creating a true school community built on shared leadership.

Challenges as we move forward with the community schools work will include:

  • Integrating what are now seen as the “academic” and “non-academic” elements of reform into a holistic approach to learning.
  • Sustaining and expanding the structures to ensure that community organizations, families and students are welcomed as equal partners in the development of our Community Schools at both the site and systems level.
  • Prioritizing and allocating the time to plan and learn how to base our work on a shared vision for educating our children and youth.

For Further Information

If you would like further information, copies of the numerous documents, brochures on SF’s community schools, and a copy of a final report on the work of New Day for Learning, contact the Superintendent’s Zone talented Community School leaders who will carry the ball with great dedication and skill:

  • Leticia Hernandez, Director of Family and Community Engagement (Mission Zone) – hernandezl1@sfusd.edu; and

 

Emily Wade-Thompson, Director of Family and Community Engagement (Bay View Zone) – wadethompsone@sfusd.edu.

Willie Brown Middle School Re-building Planning Meeting (2/9, 6:30PM)

WHO:SFUSD, Providence Baptist Church

WHAT: First Planning Meeting for the rebuilding of Willie Brown Jr. Middle School

WHERE: Providence Baptist Church, 1601 McKinnon Avenue

WHEN: February 9th, 6:30pm

CONTACT: (415) 641-8719

NOTES: Come be a part of this first discussion on the planning stages of the building of the new Willie Brown Middle School; refreshments will be provided.

Nordstrom $10,000 Youth Scholarship Program

Nordstrom
Scholarship Program

Please visit http://shop.nordstrom.com/c/nordstrom-cares-scholarship for full details.

Nordstrom is excited to award $10,000 scholarships to 80 outstanding high school students and help them achieve their dreams of going to college. The Nordstrom Scholarship recognizes students across the country for their exceptional scholastic achievement and community involvement.

The Nordstrom Scholarship is open to high school juniors who:

  • Live and attend school in one of the participating 30 states where Nordstrom currently has a full-line store. Not sure if there’s a store in your state?
    See our Store Locations.
  • Have at least a 2.7 GPA (based on a 4.0 scale) throughout high school.
  • Volunteer or participate in community services or extracurricular activities.
  • Plan on attending an accredited four-year college or university during the four years over which the scholarship is distributed. The scholarship is paid out in equal installments of $2,500.
  • Plan on applying for financial assistance in order to attend college.

HOW IT WORKS

It’s easy to submit your application for a Nordstrom Scholarship. Here’s how the selection process works:

1. YOU APPLY
Apply now through May 1, 2012.

2. SEMI-FINALISTS SELECTED
Semi-final entries are reviewed by regional selection committees. Semi-finalists will be notified via e-mail.

3. FINALISTS SELECTED
All finalists are interviewed in person or via video conference.

4. WINNERS NOTIFIED
Winners will be notified by the end of October 2012 To ensure you receive prompt notification, add nordstromscholarship@ACT.org to your address book.

HAVE QUESTIONS?

If you have any questions about the scholarship or application process, contact Ellen Greene, Nordstrom Scholarship Program Manager, at 206.373.4550 or nordscholar@nordstrom.com

 

2012 Summer Resource Fair on Sat., March 3rd

Organizations that wish to promote their respective programs are  are cordially invited to be an exhibitor at the 2012 San Francisco Summer Resource FairThis event is a perfect opportunity to showcase the work you do with youth and to reach out to potential summer program participants for all ages. Last year’s event boasted over 1000 attendees looking to enroll in great summer programs.
This event is sponsored by the SFUSD ExCEL After School Program, The Department of Children, Youth and Families, The San Francisco Examiner, and SFkids.org.
The event takes place on Saturday, March 3, 2012 from 10am to 3pm. Participation is FREE to all exhibitors and attendees. Organizations may set up at 8am the day of the event or from 4pm to 7pm the day before.
The deadline to RSVP and have your organization included in the event program is Friday, February 10, 2012.
The final deadline to register is Friday, February 24, 2012. Organizations that RSVP between February 10 and February 24 will NOT be included in the event program.
Priority will be given to the first 200 RSVPs. One ticket per organization, please.
We appreciate you filling out the accompanying questionnaire when you reserve a space.
Please keep in mind the following regulations, per the Concourse Exhibition Center:
- WiFi will be available on a first come basis for the first 15 participants who indicate the need. Limited charging stations available. Check the box in the questionnaire if you need WiFi access.
- No live animals out of cages. And towels or mats must be under cages.
- No selling or soliciting.
- No cooking with fire without securing proper permit from the Concourse Exhibition Center.
You can reach us at summerfair@SFkids.org for any exhibitor questions. We will send out additional information and reminders before the event.
Thank you for participating in the 2012 Summer Resource Fair, and for making San Francisco a great place for families!