Communities In Schools of North Carolina

Graduation Awareness Week in North Carolina

September 8, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Communities In Schools of North Carolina is proud be a partner with The North Carolina Department of Public Instruction.  This week is Graduation Awareness Week in North Carolina and we encourage each of you to visit their website at:  http://www.dpi.state.nc.us/graduate/.  To learn more about what Communities In Schools is doing in North Carolina, please visit: http://www.cisnc.org.

Graduate!

THE MESSAGE: GRADUATE!

September 7-13 has been proclaimed as Graduation Awareness Week in North Carolina by Gov. Mike Easley. This call to action kicks off a campaign to make sure that every student graduates from high school in our state. Consider this your invitation to be involved.

High school graduation is a minimum requirement for successful adulthood today, and yet, approximately one-third of the North Carolina students who enter high school each fall will not graduate within four or even five years. This statistic leads to even more heart-breaking statistics for these young people. Adults who do not have a high school diploma are

  • more likely to be incarcerated;
  • more likely to suffer from poor health;
  • less likely to earn enough money to support themselves or a family;
  • more likely to need help from government, social service agencies and charities.

I believe it is not acceptable for North Carolina to lose so many young people before they graduate from high school. The cost to these young men and women and their families is high. The cost is financial, but it is greater than that. The heaviest cost of all is the loss of human accomplishment, of happiness, and of satisfaction.

It is time for all North Carolinians to join hands and send one clear message to our young people: Graduate.

North Carolina is launching a special campaign to highlight the importance of graduating from high school and to underscore the activities that schools, families and community groups must take to help all students stay in school to graduate. It will not be a short-term project. It will not be a project that can be accomplished only through the efforts of teachers and principals. This is a long-term effort, but it will bring long-term benefits. And, I believe it is the right thing to do.

There is a role for everyone. This Web site has information to help guide your participation in Message: Graduate. Whether you are an educator, a political leader, a student, a parent or a business person – there is material on this site to help you support this effort.

Please visit this site often to find new resources to help you and your community support the Message: Graduate campaign.

June Atkinson, State Superintendent

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CIS of the Rocky Mount Region – Setting examples

September 8, 2008 · Leave a Comment


Rocky Mount Telegram

By Laura McFarland


Friday, September 05, 2008

For Moriah Vincent, 12, it is her parents.

She likes the way they make her feel good and loved.

“Whenever I need help doing something and whenever I am sad about something or upset, they help me and they talk to me and they encourage me,” Moriah said.

For Haley Mayle, 10, they are her favorite country music singers. Haley can reel off the titles of Taylor Swift or Gretchen Wilson songs like the days of the week.

“They are my role models basically. I love to sing, and they sing,” Haley said.

For children, finding a role model or mentor to look up to is a natural part of growing up, said John Tedesco, vice president of development for Big Brothers Big Sisters of the Triangle. How today’s generation of children looks up to movie stars, musicians and athletes is the subject of many adults’ concerns, but the youngsters have a greater chance of choosing someone closer to home if it is an option.

“I don’t think they are looking for as much in a role model as what we are hoping to provide them. I think for a kid, they are just looking for somebody to believe in them. They are looking for somebody who cares enough about them that they can begin to believe in themselves,” Tedesco said.

The possibilities for filling these roles are endless, though not always desirable, Tedesco said. Many children have a favorite relative who is always there with hugs and encouragement. Some find help and acceptance with a volunteer at an after-school program or a Sunday school teacher. Others have little or no positive adult influences to choose from and look to friends, gangs or a glamorous celebrity to model their behavior after.

Either way, the children are still searching for that connection.

- – -

Regardless of the reasons for choosing a role model, the decision will have long-lasting effects on a child’s life, said Ronald McNeill, director of operations for Boys & Girls Clubs of Nash/Edgecombe Counties. These are the people children are going to believe in and emulate.

“Kids really do want guidance. They really do want someone to care and be concerned about their well-being. I think that is universal for all young people, whether it is a boy or girl. I don’t think there is a specific list of things that kids look for in a mentor. … I just think they are looking for someone to care,” McNeill said.

One or two generations ago, more children had a traditional support network, so who they chose as a role model was easier to gauge, Tedesco said. People emulated their parents, grandparents, community leaders and pastors.

As many children lose sight of those closer connections, they start copying what they see on television or behaviors modeled by celebrities in tabloids, Tedesco said.

“We are moving faster and faster in the media age with the Internet and the YouTube generation, and these children, they are seeing it in their face. They are seeing it as a chance to step up and be somebody, be a celebrity, be a star athlete or a star something, just to be something,” Tedesco said.

The decision to look up to a celebrity is less about the star’s morals and values and more about materialism, said Michael Wendt, founder of Role Model Institute in Merrimac, Ma. He has worked with many children and teenagers who claimed sports stars or famous musicians as their role models.

“Kids are looking for those things that make them seem cool. A lot of your musical artists that they feel like are kind of out there and maybe even a little bit controversial are considered to be cool because they are different. Sometimes they will look up to them just because they feel like that will get them attention,” Wendt said.

Having famous role models doesn’t have to be bad though, said Loretta Avent, volunteer coordinator with Communities In Schools, a college access program for at-risk youth in Rocky Mount. While obviously the best role models are ones that children see on a regular basis and constantly receive encouragement from, those celebrities can serve the valuable purpose of providing dreams to reach for.

“There is nothing wrong with a child dreaming. Although they may not see that particular person, that is a dream for them,” Avent said.

Still, the people who are actually going to support the children in those dreams are the ones in their everyday lives, said Cornelia Singletary, family resource program manager for the Down East Partnership for Children.

The best choice is usually the parents, who are there from the beginning and are really a child’s first teachers, even if they don’t realize it, Singletary said. Instead of having a mentor program, the Down East Partnership focuses on teaching parents to be positive role models to their children.

“A star basketball player is probably somebody a child is not going to meet, but a parent is somebody that they are going to see every day. If a parent feels confident about their parenting skills, hopefully the child will feel good about going to the parent with issues or problems,” Singletary said.

- – -

However, there are many children being raised in unhealthy or strained environments who don’t have that opportunity, Avent said. That is where those outside influences become so important.

Mentors who see children as little as once a week in an after-school program or Sunday school class can still make a huge impact on their outlooks and behavior.

No one can put a price on the type of effect a caring adult has on a young child’s life, McNeill said. People can become frustrated when they do not see results right away, but the impact has still been felt.

“It could forever change their life. It could change the course of their life from going on a negative route to a positive one. It could even help them maintain a positive track if they are on a positive track,” McNeill said.

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Easley to students: Graduate

September 8, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Rocky Mount Telegram
By Carolyn Casey


Saturday, September 06, 2008

North Carolina will try to send one message to all high school students this week: Graduate.

Gov. Mike Easley has declared the week Graduation Awareness Week in order to highlight the importance of receiving a high school diploma and underscore community collaboration.

“It is not acceptable for North Carolina to lose so many young people before they graduate from high school,” N.C. State Superintendent of Public Instruction June Atkinson said in a statement. “The cost of these young men and women and their families is high. The cost is financial, but it is greater than that. The heaviest cost of all is the loss of human accomplishment, of happiness and of satisfaction.”

Approximately one-third of North Carolina students who enter high school will not graduate four or five years later. And the numbers remain lower locally.

Throughout the state this week, educators will stress how students can plan a successful future and what dropping out of school possibly can lead to.

Featured programs will be the state’s Learn and Earn initiative. The program allows high school students to take online college courses for free, and 60 Learn and Earn Early College High Schools have been set up across the state, including one in Nash and Edgecombe counties. The documentary “InsideOut” which interviews high school dropouts now in prison, will be shown in Edgecombe County Public Schools.

While staying on the path toward graduation is a daily reminder at local high schools, some are hosting special programs this week for extra emphasis.

Freshman and sophomore SouthWest Edgecombe High School students will attend a session called “Making High School Count.” The presentation provides students with the basics, such as test-taking strategies and setting goals past high school.

During morning announcements at Rocky Mount High School, students will provide their classmates with statistics, such as the number of high school dropouts who commit crimes.

“I think it’s more powerful when students get it coming from students rather than administrators and adults,” Rocky Mount High Principal Leon Farrow said.

Still, Farrow said, just because the week has a special name doesn’t mean the mission to graduate students is lessened the rest of the year.

“It’s almost a slap in our face because we’re aware of graduation every day,” Farrow said about Graduation Awareness Week. “We work hard every day to keep kids in school.

“What kind of makes me sad about when there’s a graduation awareness week is I don’t think the general public understands what we try to do every day.”

Sometimes there’s too many outside influences pulling students away from school, he said.

The major risk factors related to students leaving school before graduation are lack of attendance, low academic achievement, behavioral problems and family related circumstances, said Jay Smink, executive director of the National Dropout Prevention Center.

The governor’s initiative seeks to reach out to educate people about community organizations, such as Communities In Schools, and ask residents to play a part in their local schools.

“Most laypeople think that the dropout rate is a school issue,” Smink said.

Until communities and schools jointly understand the reasons why students drop out and are serious about finding resolutions, the dropout numbers won’t decrease, he said. It’s been a national problem for decades.

“It is a very large, critical problem,” he said. “Your area is not unique.”

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