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Community Learning Centre An overview of the project Province of Quebec

Community Learning Centre An overview of the project Province of Quebec. To enable schools and their respective communities to develop the capacity to secure their future in the regions they presently reside in. In the Province of Quebec. An English Minority Language Initiative. The Context.

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Community Learning Centre An overview of the project Province of Quebec

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  1. Community LearningCentreAn overview of the projectProvince of Quebec To enable schools and their respective communities to develop the capacity to secure their future in the regions they presently reside in.

  2. In the Province of Quebec • An English Minority Language Initiative

  3. The Context Why are Community Learning Centres (CLC) important to Québec and the English Community?

  4. Community schools do a better job Unlike traditional public schools, community schools link school and community resources as an integral part of their design and operation. Consequently, Community Learning Centres have three major advantages that schools acting alone do not. • They garner additional resources for the school to reduce demands on school staff • They provide learning opportunities that develop both academic and non-academic competencies • They offer young people, their families and community residents opportunities to build social capital.

  5. Community Vitality Making the school and the community work together at making their community a better place The assumption is that a strong school is necessary for community renewal and development: the school is at the center of community renewal In short, community and school collaborative partnerships

  6. Quality Education • Provides learning opportunities that develop both academic and non-academic competencies. • Supports curriculum and instruction by enabling the use all of the community’s assets as resources for learning. • Access additional resources for the school to reduce demands on school staff.

  7. Family Support & Engagement • Provides the context for family resource centres, early childhood development programs, and coordinated health and social services. • Family and community actively participate in designing, supporting, monitoring, and advocating quality activities. • Promotes active citizenship.

  8. Community Development • Young people develop their assets and talents, form positive relationship with peers and adults, and serve as resources to their communities. • Provides a coordinated strategy to focus and strengthen social networks, economic viability, and physical infrastructure.

  9. Better Lives To change the lives of children and their families and reduce social barriers to learning.

  10. Project Goal To support and monitor the development of a diversified group ofCommunity Learning Centres which would become hubs for education and community developmentin the English-speaking communityand serve as models for future practice.

  11. CLC Objectives • To deliver educational and support services in a seamless and integrated fashion • To have various agencies pool resources and share the responsibility of service delivery • To nurture symbiotic relationships between schools/centres and their communities • To rejuvenate the role and importance of the school and its services to communities

  12. CLCs should be able to… • provide access to the conditions deemed necessary for student success • respond to the particular culture and needs of the communities they serve • provide services that are accessible to the broader community • deliver a range of services that are self-supporting and sustainable over time

  13. and also be able to… • integrate existing services and resources with those available from external agencies • develop financial/resource partnerships that insure long-term sustainability • resonate within their communities as a successful response to their needs • demonstrate flexible and innovative approaches to service delivery

  14. Primary Conditions… • GB/SB approval of project and entente • Must be incorporated in school/centre Educational Project and Success Plans • Co-generated success planning • Integrate MELS programs & measures • Project must be supported in community • Location must be high-speed IT ready

  15. Secondary Conditions… • CLC funding is school/centre-based • Funding covers development costs only • Funding is not for service delivery • Funding is matched in cash or in kind • Adaptable to socio-economic conditions • SB supports extended opening hours • SB decentralizes MELS measures

  16. KEY ELEMENTS • School Board and school will go through a culture change, a wrap-around change supporting student achievement • CLC Coordinator is a must (will get training and support from the CLC project support team) • Commitment of Principal (will be the leader of this initiative)

  17. KEY ELEMENTS • Teachers need to see the importance of this project and get on board to change the definition of school in sustaining child achievement, including community participation • The teacher will have to include the community in their curriculum • The school will have an open door policy

  18. KEY ELEMENTS • Involve all stakeholders in the process : Mission-Vision-Framework • The word reciprocity is the key to success • Local Steering Committee or Partnership Table (virtual CLC) • School have to enter in partnership collaboration; it is not an easy task, it will just not happen, it will take time and patience, small steps

  19. KEY ELEMENTS • Recognised cultural differences: Education-Health- Community • Memorandum of understanding • Commitment of Principal • Everything should be filtered through the eye of education, what will help the child learn • Health issues concern all of us, Students-Families-Teachers-Support Staff

  20. KEY ELEMENTS • Access to Health through the schools • Build links to outside programs • Have your priorities and stick to them • Not all partners are equal • All stakeholders have to share a vision • Data collection and analysis is important to progress • Open communication

  21. KEY ELEMENTS • Plan a framework over several years and take small steps. • Survey all services in your school and put the silos down, there is probably duplication of services and they do not speak to each other. • Set the rules so that all are clear • Socio-economic deprived families: One access door; Providers should all sit at the same table and decide on how to best help the student and his family at school and at home

  22. Year 1 - Development • Selection of 15 CLCs • First installment of grant = $40 000 • Training of coordinator • Video Collaboration Network installation • Needs Assessment and data analysis • Collaborative Community Success Plan • Signed entente with community partners

  23. Year 2 – Implementation • Monitoring of services • Ongoing evaluation of service delivery • Final evaluation and reporting to stakeholders • Teacher’s network • Principal’s network

  24. Year 3 – Consolidation • Optional reorientation • Strategic plan for sustainability • Long-term agreements • CLC Partnership Network • Project evaluation and reports

  25. Research project • A research project will document and monitor the cultural changes that will take place in your community. • A Theory of Change Logic Model for your CLC will enable you to draw a picture of why your project should succeed.

  26. Impact:15 CLCs are hubs for education and community development • Strengthened vitality of English-speaking communities • Improved student success and youth retention • Improved policy environment for CLCs • Increased access to services for English-speaking communities

  27. Outcomes • 15 CLCs demonstrate organizational capacity • CLCs have innovative & effective action plan • Schools undergo systemic change

  28. Outcomes • Development of policy and practice • Partners engage in collective action • Partners engage in strategic planning

  29. Holistically planned action for educational and community change • The CLC Framework for Action for Anglophone Schools, Centres and Communities • The CLC Guidebook: Implementing a Collaborative School-Community Partnership • The CLC Workbook: Templates for Collaborative Action Planning

  30. 1 Explore • In this step you explore the possible creation of a CLC: a formal partnership of one or more schools/centres, public or private agencies and community groups, working together for the benefit of students, families and community.

  31. 2 Initiate • The purpose of this step is to initiate the partnership, a key transition point where commitment replaces contemplation. From afar, the steps look the same for any CLC but up close they will be different, depending on your context and the kind of CLC you want to create.

  32. 3 Plan • The purpose of this step is to develop an Action Plan which maps the ‘pathways to change’,’ in accordance with the terms of the Partnership Agreement.

  33. 4 Implement • The purpose of this step is to implement the Action Plan developed in the previous step.

  34. 5 Evaluate • The purpose of this step is to evaluate the performance of the CLC in accordance with Step 3.4 of the Action Plan.

  35. CLC Coordinator • This person will be the key to a sustainable development of your CLC • Job Description • Guideline to help Principals choice with approval of Project Manager • 35 000.00$ + 5 000.00$(teacher substitution)

  36. Community school coordinator • Ideally, a full-time community school coordinator works in partnership with the principal. • This person is responsible for the delivery of an array of supports provided by local agency partners and participates on the management team for the school. • Over time, most community schools consciously integrate activities in several areas to achieve the desired results: quality education; positive youth development; family support; family and community engagement in decision-making; and community development

  37. The United States of America Coalition of Community Schools • Communityschools.org

  38. Coalition of Community Schools Throughout the United States, many organizations are working together to enhance the development of community schools National Models These community school programs have been developed by community-based agencies, city youth bureaus, national organizations, or university groups. They have been replicated or adapted in many community schools throughout the nation. Most have technical assistance capacities and can respond to requests from local groups for help in planning and implementing programs..

  39. NATIONAL MODELS • Children's Aid Society Community Schools, New York • University-Assisted Schools, Center for Community West • Philadelphia Improvement Corps (WEPIC) • The United Way is assisting a school/community initiative, Bridges to Success (BTS), • Children's Aid Society Community Schools, New York • University-Assisted Schools, Center for Community West • Philadelphia Improvement Corps (WEPIC) • The United Way is assisting a school/community initiative, Bridges to Success (BTS),

  40. NATIONAL MODELS • Extended Services Schools Initiative of Wallace Reader's Digest Foundation • School of the 21st century • The School Development Program (SDP) • COZI (Comer-Zigler) • Communities in schools • Boston Excels Polk Brothers Foundation • Community Schools, Chicago • San Diego Community School Innovations

  41. What happens in a community school? In a community school, youth, families and community residents work as equal partners with schools and other community institutions to develop programs and services in six areas

  42. Six areas • Quality education • Youth development • Family support • Family and community engagement • Community development • Sports and Arts

  43. 1.Quality Education • High-caliber curriculum and instruction enable all children to meet challenging academic standards and use all of the community’s assets as resources for learning Coalition for Community schools

  44. 2. Youth development • Young people develop their assets and talent, form positive relationship with peers and adults, and serve as resources to their communities. Coalition for Community schools

  45. 3. Family support • Family resource centres, early childhood development programs, recreational activities and coordinated health and social services build on individual strengths and enhance family life. Coalition for Community schools

  46. 4. Family and community engagement • Family members and other residents actively participate in designing, supporting, monitoring and advocating quality activities in the school and the community. Coalition for Community schools

  47. 5. Community development • All participants focus on strengthening the social networks, economic viability and physical infrastructure. Coalition for Community schools

  48. 6. Sports and Arts • All participants focus on strengthening the development of arts and sports as a school and community joint effort Coalition for Community schools

  49. Community School Outcomes (49 schools) • LEARNING & ACHIEVEMENT • Academic gains for students • Improved school attendance • Reduced suspensions • BEHAVIORAL OUTCOMES • General improvement in behavior • Decrease in high-risk behavior • Reduction in suspensions Coalition for Community schools

  50. Community School Outcomes • FAMILY OUTCOMES • Improved family functioning • Increased parent involvement • Better access to services • COMMUNITY OUTCOMES • Lower rates of violence & safer neighborhoods • reduction in student mobility • Community Schools add vitality to the community Coalition for Community schools

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