Thursday, June 6, 2013

Help support adult literacy today!


What is it? A city-wide one-day organized fundraising challenge. The Academy of Hope will be competing against other non-profits in the region during the 24-hour period.
What is the purpose? Academy of Hope is attempting to raise money for the General Educational Development (GED) tests, because in early 2014, the cost will be rising from $50 to $120 to take the test. With this high school credential, adults are able to find better-paying jobs to support their families and they are more likely to support their children with their education endeavors. Academy of Hope’s goal is to reach $5,000.
What amount? $12 supplies a calculator for one learner, $24 helps a learner purchase a GED study book, and $48 helps advanced computer learners purchase textbooks for the IC3 (Internet and Computing Core Certification) class. And more is always welcome!
Why June 6? Non-profits are racing against each other for prizes and donations only count if they are received on June 6. Awards include:
 Most Donor Awards
•Most Donors for the Day: $15,000
•Most Donors at ½ Day Mark (12:00 pm on June 6th): $5,000
•Most Donors by Sector: $2,500 each
Most Dollars Raised Awards
•Most Dollars Raised: $5,000
•Most Dollars Raised by Sector: $1,000 each
“Best In” Awards
•Best in Social Media: $7,500
•Best Co-Branded Marketing Campaign: $7,500
•Best Do More 24 Event: $7,500

Please give today to help support our learners and reach our $5,000 goal for the day! Tell your friends and family!

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Putting Literacy at the Head of the Line in D.C.

Opinion Editorial published in The Washington Post on May 10, 2013
 

Darnetta Hollis, a mother of four, survived domestic violence and overcame homelessness to earn her high school diploma at age 29. One of 36 graduates from Academy of Hope’s adult education program, Hollis told fellow students at their recent graduation: “We accomplished a goal that seemed at one time impossible. By taking our education seriously, we are saying we take our lives seriously.”  Today, Hollis is working as a temp for nonprofit organizations and taking classes toward certification as a paralegal, with the goal of a career in the legal profession — a far cry from the two low-wage, dead-end jobs she was juggling before she earned her high school diploma.

More than 64,000 D.C. adults lack a high school credential. With limited basic math, reading and digital literacy skills, these residents have difficulty following written instructions, completing paperwork, communicating effectively with colleagues or helping their children with homework. This undermines the job security of workers, the economic viability of local businesses and the well-being of families.
That is why we must do more to help men and women in our community improve their basic skills. The looming overhaul of the GED exam — which will include major changes such as moving from a paper-and-pencil test to a computer-based exam, as well as significantly more difficult questions — makes this an especially critical time to support adult education.
But funding for adult literacy has decreased steadily in recent years and falls far short of the need. The proposed budget of $4.3 million for fiscal 2014 would allow some 20 nonprofit organizations to serve approximately 3,100 adults. We are asking the D.C. Council to approve a total of $8.3 million($4 million from the mayor’s contingency wish list in addition to the $4.3 million that is in the budget) to push that total to 4,100 adults and to help nonprofits update curriculum and train teachers to prepare for impending changes to the GED.
Given all the demands on the city’s budget, why should literacy be a higher priority?
Literacy is one of those root problems that, if addressed with serious investments, will pay off in multiple ways. For instance, earning a diploma is not only good for adult students; it also is good for their children. Parents with strong literacy skills can better help their children do homework, study and succeed in school. And young adults whose parents have a high school diploma are more likely to complete high school than are those whose parents do not, according to a 2012 Urban Institute report.
India Clegg, a mother of three and participant in Southeast Ministry’s GED program, illustrates the key role parents’ literacy plays. She says, “I want my children to learn from me how important an education is. I know obtaining a GED is not the only thing that will improve our future, but it will give us options.”
In addition to improving children’s educational outcomes, a high school equivalency diploma is critical to helping residents of our region succeed at training and finding work and breaking the cycle of intergenerational poverty.
With close to 80 percent of jobs in the District projected to require skills beyond high school by 2018, we can and must do more to support our residents’ most basic educational needs. The District can no longer afford to skimp on its investment in adult education; otherwise, a large portion of its residents will continue to be unprepared to fill future jobs and will be left out of the city’s well-being and growth.
As a community, we must come together to provide our residents with skills, but also hope. As Darnetta Hollis put it, “Graduation, for me, was not an end, but a beginning.”
Lecester Johnson is executive director of Academy of Hope. Terri Lee Freeman is president of The Community Foundation for the National Capital Region.
Click here to view this op ed as published in The Washington Post.

Friday, May 3, 2013

"I am a Mother in school"


My name is Mary and I’m 43 years old and I am a high school graduate. I was born and raised here in Washington, DC along with three other siblings. I attended DCPS [District of Columbia Public Schools] since the age of  five. I didn’t graduate from high school, because I became pregnant with my oldest child. I began going to Academy of Hope in 1996, and I started with the GED program. I ended up struggling with that program so in 2008 I switched to the NEDP [National External Diploma Program]. On June 14, 2012 I graduated and received my high school diploma which I was happy about.

When I told my oldest daughter that mommy was going back to school she was happy for me, and she said, “Mommy now you enter the world with us by being a high school graduate.” I just sat back and smiled because I knew that she was proud that her mommy finally has her high school diploma. Even my mother was happy–she was in tears when I mentioned her in my speech. I graduated two weeks before my mom’s birthday and so my graduation was my birthday gift to her.

Now, my dream is to attend college and receive a degree in early childhood education. I’m making a step already to make this dream come true. I’m taking up College Prep in the spring to help me prepare for college. In 2014 I should have the funds for college or maybe a scholarship, and then hopefully I can attend UDC [University of the District of Columbia] community college.  At the moment I am doing a refresher before I start my college prep classes. I enjoy studying alone and with no music and no TV –just nice and quiet. I like to study about 1 1/2 hours and then read for another hour.I have a schedule that I organized how to plan all my study time.

Now since I am a high school graduate I feel happy, joyful and praising God that I made it. Now I can fill out applications and I don’t worry about the part: “Name your high school.” I can now say I graduated in 2012. I am a graduate along with my four children. I enjoy helping my niece with her homework and she also enjoys our reading sessions. We have read over 30 books in two weeks. I remember I didn’t enjoy helping my sister with her algebra because I didn’t understand the concepts, and now I can understand algebra. I’m happy that I did make a change for myself and with the high school diploma I have so much opportunity that awaits me.

By Mary Crumble, Academy of Hope Graduate & College Pathway Learner

Mary was 1 of 12 individuals selected from over 260 applicants to the World Education Mother's Day Stories announcement. Congratulations and thank you to Mary for sharing her story and thank you to World Education for posting this story as one of your Mother's Day Stories.

To read the original post on World Education click this link.

Friday, April 19, 2013

"High Price for Low Literacy"

Last part of WAMU 88.5's series "Yesterday's Dropouts". Listen here to Special Correspondent Kavitha Cardoza's report.

To donate to Academy of Hope and help adult learners like Claudine Edwards, click here.

"At 13 years old, Claudine Edwards had a baby and dropped out of school. When she did, her dreams of becoming a nurse evaporated. Now she's 53 and has come to Academy of Hope, a nonprofit in southeast D.C., to ask about classes.
Edward's motivation for coming back to school is to be able to read baby books to her neighbor's grandchildren. This is the third time she's enrolled in adult education classes. She stopped coming the first time because of an abusive relationship; the second time was after she took the GED test — and failed.
“I went to school everyday,” she says. “It just felt like my heart dropped. To this day, I could cry.”
Edwards is like many adult learners who are very fragile, with little confidence. They are already so discouraged that any setback can be devastating. It's taken Edwards three years to summon up the courage to try again.
"I think about all these years where I could have probably been. A lot of my goals could've been accomplished. But I'm not giving up."
She lost her job as a cleaner during the recession, and for five years she's been unemployed. Edwards relies on food stamps, and her daughter pays her rent.
When Cathy Walsh, a staff member at Academy of Hope, brings up money, Edwards tenses up. When she hears fees costs $10 for three months, Edwards looks relieved. But then a moment later, she inquires about volunteer work.
“Can you give me a copy of this, so I can show it to a loved one ‘cause I’m not working.” she asks Walsh.Walsh explains the school's "service hours" payment system, in which Edwards can volunteer after class to put away chairs and clean the whiteboard. That way she'll only have to pay a third of the fee — $10 for three months of classes. But Edwards can't afford even that. She stares at the papers.
Mismatched Skills
D.C. boasts a higher percentage of advanced degress than any of the 50 states. But there are also 85,000 people like Claudine Edwards who can’t read and write very well, and who are largely invisible.
Most of these dropouts pay a higher price for low literacy. Two out of every three adults without a high school diploma in D.C. don't have jobs.
Emily Durso, with the Office of the State Superintendent for Education (OSSE), says adult education is the first step toward employment. She gives the example of Costco opening in D.C. a few months ago.
The Department of Employment Services had 800 people to apply for 165 jobs. The biggest barrier for people to apply wasn't willingness to work, she says, but to go through a screening process and read and comprehend Costco's literature.
For those who do get hired, it often means low-end jobs — part time or seasonal — with no hope of advancing. In tough times, they're often the first ones laid off.
Limited skills affect the economy
Stephen Fuller, an economist with George Mason University, says the whole region suffers when so many adults have limited skills.
“You train a worker, they go to work, earn money, spend their money, support other jobs, they pay taxes, earn a living,” he says. “So the return on investment, if done right, is extremely high, and it surprises me that we haven’t taken control of this.”
He says most of the unemployed workers looking for jobs just need some training to get back in the workforce. They have skills, but may not have the right skills.
In D.C., the government spends $4 million a year on nonprofits that educate adults. That's half of what it spent back in 2007.
Some adult educators say improving adult literacy rates would not only make for a more prosperous city, but also a healthier one.
Low literacy affects health
Students in a health class at St. Mary's Center in northwest D.C. are learning different body parts. This helps them tell a doctor what hurts during a visit to the clinic.
Alis Marachelian runs the health education program at St. Mary's, whose clinic serves approximately 25,000 patients each year. Marachelian says the barrier between caregivers and patients who can't read, write or speak is a "huge problem, every day."
“We use illustrations for medicines, we would draw the sun and the moon as to when to take the medicine,” says Marachelian. “Which one you take with food, with an icon of a food item. Sometimes we help them put it in a pillbox because they can’t count either.”
Marachelian says for some common conditions such as diabetes, the least compliant patients are the ones with low literacy. It's not that they're resisting medication; they just don't know how to measure the amount of insulin or understand the potentially fatal consequences of a wrong dose. And often, she says, a parent's low literacy affects their children's health.
“For example, giving cough syrup, measuring how much they might be overdosing their children and it’s absolutely unintentional. For asthma, some inhalers have the same color, so confusing the ones that are long acting or short acting is a problem.”
Marachelian says when children's symptoms fail to improve, doctors may increase the dosage or change the medication, thinking it's not working. There are more emergency room visits. Children have to miss school and parents take off from work. With a chronic condition, she says, this could mean the child falls behind academically or the parent gets fired.
Teaching the next generation
Parents who don't read well themselves also have a hard time helping their children in school.
"There is a sense of humiliation that they're somehow going to be embarrassed if they approach the school, because of what they don't have and don't know," says Valarie Ashley, who runs Southeast Ministries, an adult education center in D.C.
Research shows parental involvement improves a child's academic performance, resulting in higher test scores, better attendance and improved graduation rates. And Ashley says she's seen that happen in her own family. She was 10 when her mother went back to school at 37. Overnight, they started to sit around the dining table every evening and do homework together.
“The point came fairly quickly, where she could then supervise and help us with some of our homework,” says Ashley. “She also started to advocate for us in school, and she didn’t do that before.”
But perhaps the biggest cost is one that can't be measured. It's the invisible cost of what might have been. John Bridegland, with Civic Enterprises, a public policy firm in D.C., calls dropping out a "dream buster." Students who drop out usually don't vote and don't volunteer.
“With millions of students dropping out every year, it’s like generations of talent needlessly lost,” she says. “You think about the civic fabric of our communities and what life could have been like. You realize the dropout epidemic is a huge loss to our nation.”
It may have seemed easy to drop out of school, but the path after that is hard -- a lifetime of dreams that lie just out of reach. It means a business not started, a song unwritten, a bedtime story never read.
Even those who go back to school often struggle to earn a diploma and hold a steady job. But for many of yesterday's dropouts, there's something else at stake as well: something less tangible but no less significant: A chance to emerge from the shadows and finally be seen."
Go to WAMU 88.5's 5-part series, "Yesterday's Dropouts", for more reports, videos and resources. 




Monday, April 15, 2013

Listen to Our Learners on WAMU 88.5 on Wed. 4/17 @ 6:50am & 8:50am

The national debate around education usually focuses on children. But what happens when those children grow up and try to make their way into the world? WAMU 88.5's new five-part series, Yesterday's Dropouts, takes a look at the struggles adults face long after they leave school without a diploma. This series includes interviews with Academy of Hope's community and adult learners.

Tune in 4/15 through 4/19 at 6:50am and 8:50am. Each report will also be re-broadcast on consecutive Fridays on Metro Connection at 1pm and Saturdays at 7am.

Listen and connect here: http://wamu.org/yesterdays_dropouts

Also check out this slideshow that WAMU 88.5 produced of our recent graduation and listen to some of our graduates' voices.

Friday, March 8, 2013

Academy of Hope featured on CBS News and on WAMU 88.5's Community Minute

CBS News
Earlier this year, a CBS crew came out to Academy of Hope to film for a segment about nonprofits "you should know about". Susan McGinnis, CBS reporter, talked to an adult learner and to our Executive Director, Lecester Johnson.  CBS was also present during Academy of Hope's recent graduation on February 1st, where they captured great moments of the emotional event and words from one of our graduates, Darnetta Hollis.  The segment was aired on various CBS channels and affiliates over the weekend of February 15.  We're so happy to share this video with you!

Non profit bringing hope to adult learners
http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=50142235n

Thank you CBS for this fantastic piece!

WAMU 88.5
Academy of Hope was also chosen to be featured on the Community Minute segment produced by WAMU 88.5.  Each month, Community Minute highlights community organizations that are working to improve the lives of people in the DC metro region.  Lecester Johnson, Executive Director, spoke for Community Minute.  Listen to Lecester throughout March on WAMU 88.5 or by following the link below:

Community Minute: Basic adult education services in Wards 5 and 8 in D.C.
http://wamu.org/community/13/02/27/community_minute_basic_adult_education_services_in_wards_5_and_8_in_dc

Thank you WAMU 88.5!

Friday, March 1, 2013

Academy of Hope is offering College Readiness Classes

Interested in taking College Readiness Classes?

Academy of Hope's Bridge program seeks to support adult learners as they prepare for college coursework. Students will attend academic classes in math, writing and grammar, build computer skills, receive assistance in completing college essays and financial add documents as well as receive individual advising and career counseling.

Apply by March 18th, 12pm.