Project
GRAD USA - Prepping America's Impoverished Youths for College Success
By Matthew Robb, MSW, LCSW-C
Social Work Today
Vol. 4, No. 6, Page 30
Start early. Collaborate.
Create a culture of excellence. That is the mission of a project aimed
at giving impoverished youths a fighting chance at academic, employment,
and personal success.
While America celebrates
the economy’s rebound from recession, many social workers temper
their enthusiasm with the knowledge that inner cities are still reeling
from intergenerational depression and neglect.
Even among the best of
us, it’s easy to despair, lose hope, and buy into the popular
myth that long-standing problems are eternal. But across the nation,
dedicated individuals are beginning to turn the tide, transforming
hopelessness into hope and planting seeds for a brighter tomorrow.
Consider Project
GRAD USA
Hailed today as a national success, this program began as an experiment
in the lowest-performing school in Houston. The year 1988 saw Tenneco
Corporation CEO James Ketelsen approach Jefferson Davis High School’s
ninth-grade class and make this surprise offer: Apply yourself and
graduate within four years (minimum 2.5 grade point average) and we
will award you a college scholarship—period. Tenneco’s
selection of Davis made perfect sense, as more than 90% of its students
lived in poverty and only 20 Davis graduates total had even enrolled
in college the previous year. Prior to Tenneco’s challenge,
when parents were asked about sending their kids to college, they
would recite the Davis High School mantra: It’s a pipe dream.
No way. Ain’t gonna happen.
But it did happen—and
quickly. Within four years, the Tenneco Scholarship program managed
to quadruple Davis High School’s college enrollees. Though this
number fell well short of the ambitious benchmark set by Ketelsen,
city officials hailed its success. But elation soon turned to consternation
as gloomy reports started trickling in, showing that Tenneco’s
scholarship program wasn’t working as planned. Instead of charting
new futures, many of the school’s newly minted grads were either
floundering or failing in college. Ketelsen probed for answers and
took away a harsh lesson: Kids raised in impoverished, often hostile
environments, need to be prepped from day one. By ninth grade, it’s
often too late.
Ketelsen remained optimistic.
But to many observers, Davis High School’s long-standing problems
suddenly started to look eternal.
A Widening
Achievement Gap
Concluding that the recipe for academic success requires more than
scholarships and inspirational speeches, Ketelsen went back to the
drawing board. He huddled with the education experts, Ford Foundation,
gained the financial backing of El Paso Energy Foundation, and retooled
Tenneco’s program from the ground up.
In 1994, he launched Project
GRAD Houston. By 1997, the program went national, and today Project
GRAD USA serves 135,000 students in 217 schools and is the recipient
of glowing testimonials. As for the former underachiever of Houston—Davis
High School—last year it saw 322 of its students graduate and
103 enroll in college. Overall, from 1988 to 2004, Davis High School’s
graduation rate jumped 85%, the number of its students entering college
quadrupled, and the college graduation rate for low-income students
nearly doubled the national average.
The need for innovative
programs tailored to help America’s languishing inner cities
and rural areas could not be more acute, says William Rios, director
of parent and community involvement at Project GRAD USA’s headquarters,
located in Houston. “If this country hopes to retain its global
competitiveness, we must help our marginalized citizens become more
productive,” he says. “African American and Hispanic kids
today make up about 35% of the nation’s school-age population,
meaning that we need to adequately prepare them for the workforce.
We also know that future jobs will demand higher literacy, better
communication skills, and technical know-how.” Young people
who lack these requisites, Rios says, are at higher risk for chronic
underemployment or joblessness, an observation borne out by longitudinal
studies.
Government reports add
to the sobering picture. By the time low-income and minority students
reach fourth grade, their reading and math skills lag a full two grade
levels behind their peers, and by ninth grade, almost four levels.
Before their senior year, a shocking proportion of disadvantaged and
minority kids simply drop out, effectively ending their best hope
for a good job with good pay.
Tenneco’s students
failed in some cases and succeeded in others. And while the experiment
showed what happens when underprivileged, marginal students are thrust
into competitive environments, it also demonstrated how enthusiastically
they will respond to challenges. Lessons learned: Start early. Join
hands. Create a culture of excellence.
The Lifeblood
of Social Work
Seen another way, then, Project GRAD represents the lifeblood
of good social work, emphasizing nuanced interventions, long-term
focus, systems perspective, savvy community organizing, constructive
dialogue, attentive case management, and exceptional commitment, teamwork,
and respect.
Educational programs come
and go. So, what differentiates Project GRAD from countless other
educational initiatives?
Like the Tenneco program,
Project GRAD backs up its talk with financial incentives. Students
who meet reasonable academic standards receive a scholarship of at
least $4,000 to attend any accredited U.S. college or university and
receive expert help in obtaining financial aid and other scholarships.
To complete the picture,
Project GRAD boasts a comprehensive, K-16 set of interventions geared
to reach kids early—early enough to hone classroom skills, shape
good behaviors, and catch them before they’re at risk of dropping
out. Seeking to counteract an insidious cultural message that says
minority or impoverished kids can’t succeed, Project GRAD instead
challenges them to reach lofty goals—boosting high school graduation
rates to 80% and college graduation rates to 50%—and then integrates
family, school, and community supports to help make it all happen.
Project GRAD creates a nourishing educational environment through
research-proven curricula, advanced teacher training, and increased
community and parental engagement. Other key components are the following:
• “Success
for All” reading curriculum;
• “MOVE IT
Math” curriculum; and
• “Consistency
Management and Cooperative Discipline” classroom behavior system.
Project GRAD has proved so successful at transforming disadvantaged
communities that 11 other cities have launched their own programs
in Brownsville, TX; Atlanta; Newark, NJ; Los Angeles; Knoxville, TN;
Cincinnati, Columbus, Akron, and Lorain, OH; Kenai Peninsula, AK;
and Roosevelt, NY.
Feeding Into Success
“Part of what makes us different,” William Rios explains,
“is our comprehensive, vertical-team approach, which allows
us to closely track our students from an early age. Lots of reformers
will pick this school or that school to focus their efforts. Project
GRAD targets every single school within an identified ‘feeder
pattern’ and then follows each student from beginning to end.”
For Davis High School,
this feeder pattern translates into several elementary schools “feeding”
their students into one or two middle schools that, in turn, feed
into Davis. Continuity and coordination are enhanced even more through
the use of existing assets, Rios says. While other programs might
call for revamping entire curricula and forcing the wholesale ouster
of administrators and teachers, Project GRAD works in partnership
with them. “We want them to buy into our entire program,”
he notes.
To close the achievement
gap, Project GRAD also makes available innovative programs such as
Communities In Schools (CIS) and Parent University. In partnership
with CIS, Project GRAD places social service professionals in its
schools to help students resolve problems that affect their schoolwork.
“We look for people who either have a degree in social work
or, in some cases, have extensive backgrounds with low-income minority
youth,” Rios says. “They get referrals from teachers,
parents, administrators, community partners, even kids themselves—from
anyone who is concerned about a particular student having problems.
Some students are referred to other agencies; some receive individual
or group counseling or other services.”
Borrowing on the notion
that it takes a village to raise an underprivileged student, Project
GRAD casts its net wide and enlists the support of the entire community.
At the beginning of each academic year, an energetic team of social
services professionals, teachers, and parents knock on community doors
and ask parents to sign a contract that commits their children to
outlined academic standards. “The particular challenge in Houston,”
Rios says, “is really creating a new culture that says these
kids can be successful beyond high school. Doing this requires a coordinated
effort from everybody in the community.” Rios worked as a community
organizer for six years.
Helping Students,
Helping Parents
Project GRAD helps not only students but also their parents. Houston
Program Development Manager Nina Williams spends much of her time
training parents to help their kids. “We know parents or caregivers
are the true first teachers of children,” she says. “They
have the most influence on their children. When children see their
parents are interested in their success and education, then they will
pick up on that message and do better as well.”
With that guiding philosophy,
Parent University offers adult education classes that give parents
the tools they need to support their children’s education. “We
offer all sorts of workshops for parents,” Rios says. “At
the beginning of each year, we ask them what they need. It might be
GED or ESL classes or instruction in how to help their children with
their math or reading homework, time management, how to create effective
study environments, or introduction to computers. We feel the better
educated parents are, the more they can help their children as students.”
While his daughter attends
Jack Yates High School, Houstonian Bill Miller volunteers as a Project
GRAD “Parent Pal,” part of a peer-mentoring program for
parents. Miller is enthusiastic about Project GRAD. “In the
big scheme of things,” he says, “Project GRAD lets parents
know that college is no longer a dream. With college a reality, our
kids are keeping their grades up. Parents don’t have to browbeat
them because both students and parents are preparing for college together.”
As part of Project GRAD’s requirements, Miller’s daughter
joined her classmates for the 10-day Summer Institute at Baylor University.
“The idea,” he says, “is to acclimate them to college
life, to move them from class to class, and give them a brief experience
of what it’s like to live on a college campus.”
Adds Rios, “Very
early on, even in kindergarten or first grade, we start holding parent-university
workshops focused on helping parents get their children on the road
to college. We take both children and parents on field trips. For
many parents, it’s the first time they’ve ever been on
a college campus. So when their kid someday starts talking about the
college library, computer lab, or student union, they’ve seen
it, know it, done it.”
Rios allows that Project
GRAD isn’t without major challenges. “It’s sometimes
difficult,” he says, “to get people to buy completely
into the concept. Some people react, ‘Oh, you’re offering
the latest silver bullet. Why should I accept this?’ But we
take the approach that this is a process. Tremendous results don’t
happen overnight. What we tell them is that we’ve been working
with the Davis feeder pattern for a long time, we’ve experienced
success, and we are here for the long haul.”
Much work remains, but
mother Lydia Perez says she shares Ketelsen’s guiding optimism.
Perez, a Parent Pal at John Reagan High School in Houston, says, “For
many parents, college is nowhere in sight. But I tell people, ‘Our
children are our future. As parents, our job is to lay down their
foundation and put them on the path where they need to be.’”
Miller nods in agreement.
“Project GRAD has really stepped up to the plate,” he
says. “It might not pay for four years at many colleges, but
it puts into the heads of kids, ‘Hey, I can get this thing started.
If I graduate from high school, I have a real chance.’”
With a chuckle, he adds,
“What Project GRAD has done for my daughter is to help her become
much more focused. The other night, I got a phone call from a recruiter
who told me my daughter had contacted the college online and they
were following up.”
Project GRAD boasts many
other strengths and nuances, but the bottom line is that it is working.
James Ketelsen’s
vision is beginning to transform hopelessness into hope and plant
the seeds of a brighter tomorrow.
— Matthew
Robb, MSW, LCSW-C, is a social worker and freelance writer residing
in suburban Washington, DC. He is a frequent contributor to Social
Work Today.
Social Workers:
“The Glue That Holds the Program Together”
“Our families worry about things most people don’t worry
about,” says Nina Williams, a Houston-based program development
manager of Project GRAD USA. “A lot of them are poor beyond
belief, but they have a will to succeed, and if someone believes in
them and wants to help them, they will grab onto that.
“One of my colleagues
calls social workers the glue that holds the entire program together.
And it’s the truth,” she continues. “They address
problems outside the classroom that impede academic success. We know
that if children are hungry, they can’t focus in the classroom.
We know that if they didn’t have a bed to sleep in the night
before, it will be difficult for them to achieve academically the
next day. If we know there’s a child in need, we are relentless.”
Williams’ job is
to train social service providers to do their work. “We focus
on building relationships in the school, with parents, students, and
in the community,” she says. “In the fall, our social
workers and ‘parent coordinators’ organize a door-to-door
campaign that sees them knocking on the doors of every incoming student
at every one of our sites across America. A lot of the times, that
is the first official contact that is made with parents.
“When people find
out that we’re dedicated to helping their children by any means
necessary, they start asking us to do outrageous things,” Williams
continues. “An elementary teacher came to me one day and told
me that Esmeralda, a kindergarten student, needed an ear. Esmeralda,
you see, had a small stub on her head instead of an ear. The teacher
told me it was impeding her success in school, that she could not
hear and the children were picking on her.”
Williams got busy. One
connection led to another. In time, she located a prominent Mexican
ear surgeon. “The doctor spoke Esmeralda’s language,”
she recalls. “He told her he wanted to give her an ear. Today,
Esmeralda is doing great.”
— MR
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