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These California schools connect kids to community services. Will they survive budget cuts?

Princess Momoh-Danga, left, spends time with friends Jada Lash, center, and Kyyah King, right during an end-of-year celebration for the Sisterhood at Oakland High School in Oakland on May 10, 2024.
Juliana Yamada
/
CalMatters
Princess Momoh-Danga, left, spends time with friends Jada Lash, center, and Kyyah King, right during an end-of-year celebration for the Sisterhood at Oakland High School in Oakland on May 10, 2024.

Gov. Gavin Newsom launched the community school initiative with $4.1 billion in grants to connect students and their families to medical care, counseling and other services.

Budget for many California programs, but one multi-billion-dollar initiative has so far evaded the ax: an ambitious push to bring medical and dental care, counseling, parenting classes, cultural activities and other services to public schools.

Gov. Gavin Newsom has so far spared what鈥檚 known as the community school initiative, which pairs schools with local nonprofits and other government agencies to provide services to students and their parents. The goal is to transform schools into social service hubs with strong ties to families and the community 鈥 an approach that shows can boost student attendance, reduce suspensions and raise test scores.

Newsom launched the initiative in 2020 with a series of grants totalling $4.1 billion for schools to roll out community school programs over 10 years. About half the money has been spent already, with the awarded last week.

Now, in California, the Legislative Analyst鈥檚 Office has recommended from the remaining funding. Some community school advocates fear the state may slash funding even for schools that are midway through the rollout process. The Legislature has until June 15 to make a decision.

鈥淚t is a huge amount of money, but cutting it now would be devastating,鈥 said Anna Maier, a senior researcher and policy advisor at the Learning Policy Institute, an independent think tank that鈥檚 researched community schools extensively. 鈥淭his is an audacious and complicated initiative, and it鈥檚 just getting started. We need to keep the momentum going.鈥

The community school grant money, which so far has gone to more than 1,000 schools, primarily pays for staff: coordinators, tutors, social workers, after-school staff and others. Over time, the programs are intended to be less reliant on state funds as the outside organizations cover more of the costs and schools start billing Medi-Cal for health services.

Nothing new about social services in schools

The idea of schools providing more than just academics has been around for at least a century, as schools during the Industrial Revolution provided meals, clothing and other necessities for students living in poverty. In 1973, the Black Panthers started what鈥檚 thought to be by opening a school in Oakland that served meals and offered curriculum focused on Black history and culture and other programs tailored to local families.

 Students hang out at the Shop 55 Wellness Center.
Juliana Yamada
/
CalMatters
First: Students hang out at the Shop 55 Wellness Center. Last: Dentist Ann Chen, left, and dental assistant Phuong Truong, right, work on a student patient at the Shop 55 Wellness Center at Oakland High School in Oakland on May 10, 2024.

Informally, many schools in middle-class and affluent areas have been community schools for decades. They鈥檝e built strong relationships with local organizations and businesses, encouraged family involvement and offered a slew of activities suited to their students鈥 needs. In those neighborhoods, the schools鈥 success is at least partially due to family support and involvement.

The current push for community schools was spurred in part by a 2017 that found in general, schools that integrate social services 鈥渉elp children succeed academically and prepare for full and productive lives.鈥 Low-income students, students of color, students with disabilities and English learners especially benefited from schools with extra services, parent involvement and strong links to outside organizations.

Pandemic upended community school rollout

But so far, evidence of community schools鈥 effectiveness in California is uneven 鈥 in part because the Covid-19 pandemic upended the education system just as community school programs were getting underway. Oakland Unified, for example, has one of the state鈥檚 largest and most comprehensive community school programs, but also has some of the most lackluster outcomes. The suspension rate 鈥 4% last year 鈥 has barely changed since 2018 and remains above the state average. The graduation rate actually inched downward last year, to 75%.

, a Republican assembly member from Newport Beach who sits on the Assembly Appropriations Committee, said she supports community schools generally but is dismayed that , especially Black and Latino students, have fallen over the past five years, despite the community school investment. While the pandemic played a role in that decline, she expects better results by now.

鈥淐alifornia should have the finest schools in the country, if not the world,鈥 Dixon said. 鈥淎s legislators, we need to make sure all our children are getting a high quality education, and right now, I don鈥檛 know how well we鈥檙e doing that.鈥

Another challenge is accountability. Schools that receive community school grants must report their progress to the state every year and post the reports on their web sites. Nearly all reported their results to the state, but it鈥檚 unclear how many schools actually posted those reports publicly. An informal look at a half-dozen districts that received grants showed that none had posted their reports, at least not in an obvious place.

鈥淐ommunity schools give us a chance to address historic inequities. It鈥檚 long overdue, but the education system is getting a new mindset, a whole new approach.鈥
ASHER KI, DIRECTOR OF EDUCATIONAL RENEWAL AND INNOVATION AT CALIFORNIANS FOR JUSTICE

Schools with poor results are supposed to get assistance from the state, and those who fail to improve risk losing their grants. But the assistance program is still getting underway, and participation is not mandatory.

鈥淐ommunity schools are a great idea, but we need to know what鈥檚 working, what鈥檚 impactful,鈥 said Kimi Kean, director of Families in Action for Quality Education, which advocates for family involvement in Oakland schools. 鈥淭his is such a significant investment, we can鈥檛 overlook the importance of accountability.鈥

Angelica Jongco, deputy managing attorney for Public Advocates, one of a in California, said the accountability 鈥 and results 鈥 will improve with time. Schools have only been getting grant money for two years, which is far too soon to expect results.

鈥淎ttendance, test scores, suspension rates 鈥 these things do not change automatically,鈥 Jongco said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 all the more reason we need to maintain this investment. Especially in times of challenges and uncertainty, we need to be investing in what works.鈥

鈥楢 whole new approach鈥

Some schools have shown dramatic progress since winning community school grants. Anaheim High School, for example, since 2016-17 has seen its graduation rate jump 15 percentage points and the number of students meeting California college admission requirements jump almost 40 percentage points, according to .

鈥淭he community school money has provided services to students who otherwise would not have them. Simple as that.鈥
PAMELA MOY, OAKLAND HIGH SCHOOL PRINCIPAL

And hidden within otherwise mediocre data, some schools point to individual success stories. Eureka City Schools, for example, had a high rate of chronic absenteeism last year, but over a 60-day period one homeless student went from 40 absences to just one and another student went from 26 to one. Oakland Unified has seen improvements in the number of students completing the classes required for college admission, as well as a ten-fold increase in the number of students enrolled in college while still in high school.

For Asher Ki, attending a community school would have made all the difference in his education. As a high school student in Fresno in the early 2010s, Ki said he felt 鈥渁lone and unsupported.鈥 Part of the reason was that his family, who is African American, did not feel welcome and were not engaged.

鈥淔or them, school wasn鈥檛 a place you wanted to be. It wasn鈥檛 where you鈥檇 go for a meaningful education,鈥 Ki said. 鈥淪o they couldn鈥檛 help me, because they didn鈥檛 know where to go, who to talk to鈥. Any chance at pushing the status quo was met with racism and dehumanization.鈥

That experience is what drove Ki to advocate for community schools. Ki is now director of educational renewal and innovation at Californians for Justice, a social justice advocacy group that鈥檚 one of a that jointly promote community school policy in California. If he had attended a community school, he said, those years would have been much different: He and his family would have had more of a stake in his education.

鈥淐ommunity schools give us a chance to address historic inequities,鈥 Ki said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 long overdue, but the education system is getting a new mindset, a whole new approach.鈥

Museum visits, health care and more at Oakland High

Oakland High School, a 1,500-student school in Oakland Unified where nearly all students are low-income, receives $360,000 a year in community school state grant money. Among other things, the money pays for museum tickets, yoga classes, college visits, tours of tech companies and other activities for Black girls in a club called Sisterhood.

Members of the Sisterhood club serve themselves lunch during an end-of-year celebration at Oakland High School in Oakland on May 10, 2024. The Sisterhood club is supported by the California Community Schools Partnership Program (CCSPP), which allows the students to participate in activities such as college campus visits.
Juliana Yamada
/
CalMatters
Members of the Sisterhood club serve themselves lunch during an end-of-year celebration at Oakland High School in Oakland on May 10, 2024. The Sisterhood club is supported by the California Community Schools Partnership Program (CCSPP), which allows the students to participate in activities such as college campus visits.

When Oakland high received its grant, Black girls had the school鈥檚 highest suspension rate. The club was a way to help Black girls build friendships, connect to role models and learn about opportunities beyond high school, said principal Pamela Moy.

On a recent Friday meeting of Sisterhood, a few dozen girls shared lunch, chatted about their summer plans and reflected on their year with the club leaders, African American women they referred to as 鈥渁unties.鈥 Overall, more than 100 girls have participated in club activities.

Senior Habakkuk Johnson said the club has given girls a place to relax and connect.

鈥淚f people come from bad environments, they can come here and be around good people. It helps people do better,鈥 Johnson said. 鈥淚t helps people change.鈥

Princess Momoh, a junior, said the club helped her 鈥渇ind Black girls I can relate to. It gave me a chance to talk to more people and make more friends.鈥

Third-year student Princess Momoh at Oakland High School in Oakland on May 10, 2024. Momoh is a member of the Sisterhood club at Oakland High, which is supported by the California Community Schools Partnership Program (CCSPP).
Juliana Yamada
/
CalMatters
Third-year student Princess Momoh at Oakland High School in Oakland on May 10, 2024. Momoh is a member of the Sisterhood club at Oakland High, which is supported by the California Community Schools Partnership Program (CCSPP).

Since the pandemic, the suspension rate among Black girls at Oakland High has dropped from 13.5% to 9.6% 鈥 still high, but a bigger decline than other groups experienced. School counselor Faith Onwusa said she is certain the club is a primary reason for the improvement.

鈥淲hen I was in school we had nothing like this,鈥 Onwusa said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just super necessary.鈥

Community school money also goes toward the school鈥檚 wellness center, which offers everything from first aid to mental health counseling to assistance for recent immigrants and their families. The center has more than 40 employees from a variety of agencies, and sees a constant stream of students. Spacious, brightly decorated and always stocked with snacks, the center is an inviting place for students as well as staff. Some students just go there to hang out.

鈥淭he community school money has provided services to students who otherwise would not have them,鈥 principal Moy said. 鈥淪imple as that.鈥

 is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics.