| KIPP's partnership with parents |
|
|
| By Robert Joiner, Platform Staff | |
| Last Updated ( Friday, 23 May 2008 ) | |
|
“We are called to be in this neighborhood,” says Jon Richard (pronounced ri-SHARD), KIPP’s school leader. “We take walks with our KIPPsters andt hey see those individuals. We talk about the choices we have in life. Everyone has a story. It’s how you use your story that makes you different.” He adds that conversations about the pull between KIPPster and hipster cultures are necessary because “this is where our students live; this is their circle of influence. We create a circle of influence inside KIPP. You go to college and make the world a better place."
The school is situated in KIPP builds in study time
"KIPPsters" work quietly and support each other. KIPP’s track record shows that social problems beyond the school door need not interrupt a child’s dreams. Eighty percent of KIPP graduates go to college in spite of growing up in poor families and living in homes where some parents are overwhelmed by problems and indifferent to a child’s school activities. But KIPP tries to find a way to get these parents involved. Each KIPP student must sign a “Commitment to Excellence” form in his or her home. This gives KIPP officials a way to get into the living room and meet the families. Just as all students have the phone numbers of KIPP teachers, so do the parents. “We urge them to call often, especially when they have questions,” Richard says of the parents. In addition all parents are required to attend two conferences and sign biweekly reports on their children’s progress at KIPP. Finally, Richard says, many parents accompany KIPP on learning or field trips. But Richard says it is unrealistic to expect these parents to be as involved as a typical suburban parent might be. “Many parents are single moms and work three jobs to make ends meet,” he says. “Mandating school volunteer hours for them, in my opinion, is unwarranted stress.” In an ideal world, Richard says, all children would learn about work ethic, humility, integrity and other character-building qualities. “Our students are faced with a society that doesn’t necessarily lend itself to teaching these things anymore,” he says. “Home lives are tough. The students spend 9.5 hours a day at KIPP. We have to teach them more than just academics. They have to learn that it’s not just learning and being smart, but that working hard and being nice will take you farther in life.” |
Group seeks freeze on Mo. executions: It wants a study of a system it says has been used capriciously against the poor, minorities and those with bad lawyers. | AP/KMOV
Testimony begins in cyber-bullying case: Prosecutors say Lori Drew of St. Charles County wanted to prey on the psyche of Megan Meier, the teen who committed suicide. | Wired.com
McCain is winner in Missouri vote: With all jurisdictions reporting, his lead over Obama was 3,632 votes out of more than 2.9 million cast -- a margin of 0.12 percentage points. | Politico
St. Louis shut out of NCAA men's Final Four selections: It was passed over in favor of New Orleans, Atlanta, North Texas, Indianapolis and Houston for 2012-16. | AP/ESPN
State propositions run the gamut: Same-sex marriage, animal rights, physician-assisted suicide and more were decided by voters nationwide on Tuesday. | AP/Washington Times
How they voted: A national exit poll shows Obama did better among women than men, better among young than old, better among Jews than Protestants. | New York Times
Democrats pick up at least 19 House seats: The gain builds on the 30 seats the party captured two years ago. | AP
Democrats gain at least five Senate seats: Several races - Minnesota, Alaska, Georgia and Oregon - were still too close to call on Wednesday morning. But the Dems appeared unlikely to gain attain a filibuster-proof 60 seats. | New York Times
Federal judge orders release of five detainees at Guantanamo: The Algerian terror suspects have been held without charges for almost seven years. | AP/Los Angeles Times
Arizona governor will head homeland security under Obama: Janet Napolitano brings law-and-order experience to the job, particularly in the area of illegal immigration. | Politico
World Toilet Day is no joke: The international effort, founded in 2001, aims to make sanitation a key global issue. | AFP/Canada.com
California Supreme Court will weigh gay marriage ban: It accepted a challenge to the newly adopted measure but refused to allow same-sex weddings to resume. | San Francisco Chronicle
Leading economic indicators fall in October, reversing trend of a month earlier: Figures show the U.S. economy is very weak and getting weaker. | MarketWatch
First-time jobless claims rise to highest level since 1992: Job losses in the U.S. have totaled 1.2 million this year. | Bloomberg
Chances for aid to automakers wane: Kit Bond is working with Democrats on possible help, but most other Republicans oppose a bailout. | Detroit Free Press
Stocks fall sharply on latest economic news: The Dow dropped below 8,000 as hope for a bailout of U.S. automakers failed and worries rose about deflation. | New York Times
Pay for presidents of public universities rising faster than that at private schools: Median pay and benefits for presidents of public institutions rose 7.6 percent in 2007-8, to $427,400. | New York Times
Chief Illiniwek will dance again: On Saturday, the new version of the longtime mascot will make his debut after the Illini-Ohio State football game at Champaign-Urbana. | Chicago Tribune
Anonymous Washington U. students start bike-sharing program on campus: The Washington University Green Bicycle Project lets students, staff and faculty use the bikes without charge. | Student Life
Indiana University building gets revised name: It had been named for longtime trustee who was segregationist; now, name of school's first black basketball player will be added. | AP/Chicago Sun-Times
Video by Christian Cudnik
Jazz musician and educator Jerome Harris talks about the importance of teaching. See a larger version of this video and read a profile of Harris.
One can argue that the financial problem started when Congress required credit-card companies to charge a minimum payment that actually included principal as well as interest. So, shouldn't Washington get to the root of the problem?
In his much-maligned "malaise" speech, President Jimmy Carter spoke of a "crisis of the American spirit" and a Congress paralyzed by special interests. He warned that shared sacrifice had been "abandoned like an orphan without support and without friends." Those warnings hold true. The United States needs to come to terms with its lowered economic position and restore its moral leadership.
The Big Three automakers may well be facing drastic, forced reorganization, but they do not have the same compelling case for a government bailout as the financial sector had. Business professor Anjan Thakor explains the difference.
Posted 5 p.m. Mon. Nov. 17 - This weekend, nearly a hundred St. Louisans, many of them high school students, will travel to Fort Benning, GA to protest the School of the Americas. Among its graduates are some of Latin America's most notorious dictators, guilty of some of the continent's most savage human rights violations. Rachel Heidenry, who participated in the protest while a student at Nerinx Hall and Bard College, describes the experience and took the photographs that accompany the story and are in a slideshow at the end of the article.
Time for a celebration!
Today is the 80th birthday of one of Hollywood's most beloved creations: Mickey Mouse !
..while yesterday was the 30th anniversary of something they'd rather not talk about: Star Wars, The Holiday Special .
The Beacon features links to the latest work by the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.This Washington-based non-profit organization promotes in-depth international coverage of topics that have been under-reported, mis-reported - or not reported at all.
To see a list on our World news page, click here . The Pulitzer Center's founder is Jon Sawyer, former Washington Bureau chief of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Join the folks who have already found the Beacon on Facebook, the social networking site. See the most popular stories of the day, photos, videos and upcoming events. Visit the St. Louis Beacon page on Facebook and become a fan.
Twitter is a "microblogging" service where users can provide short updates about what they are doing. stlbeacon is our official Twitter feed – check it out to find our featured stories and the news that matters.
Mortgage foreclosures are at the heart of the current economic crisis. The Beacon and KETC/Channel 9 have been covering how mortgage problems affect St. Louis area residents.
Visit our special section to read coverage of these issues, watch Channel 9's stories and access resources to find help.
What's this icon? It's the standard icon for RSS.
RSS gives you another option for reading the Beacon, in a way that may be more convenient for you. As explained below, you can use our RSS feed to get alerts about new Beacon content. The Beacon's main RSS feed is here.
For more about RSS, read this quick introduction or watch this video: RSS in simple English.