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Padres Promotores

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Title: Padres Promotores


1
GEAR UP Santa Ana
Padres Promotores de la Educación A Model of
Parent Engagement
Rosa Harrizon Lobelia Martinez Padres
Promotores de la Educación Santa Ana Partnership
2
The Santa Ana Community
  • The City
  • Population 337,977
  • 80 Hispanic
  • 74 of the citys residents speak Spanish
  • Median age of residents 26.5 years with 46
    under 19
  • 60 of residents age 25 or older do not have a
    high school diploma
  • The School District
  • 36 Elementary Schools
  • 9 Intermediate Schools
  • 5 Comprehensive High Schools
  • 5th Largest School District in California
  • 92.2 Latino Student Population

3
Santa Ana Partnership
  • The Santa Ana Unified School District
  • Santa Ana College
  • Cal State Fullerton
  • UC Irvine
  • Community-based organizations
  • businesses

4
Partnership Structure
Student Affiliates Students from SAC, CSUF
UCI MEETS MONTHLY AS NEEDED
Intersegmental Evaluation Team Evaluators -
SAC, SAUSD, UCI MEETS QUARTERLY AS NEEDED
Cabinet Administrators from SAC, SAUSD,
UCI MEETS TWICE A MONTH
Achieving College HEC, Partners, SAUSD, SAC,
CSUF, UCI MEETS MONTHLY AS NEEDED
Santa Ana/GEAR UP Partnership Business Partners,
California State University Fullerton (CSUF),
Non-Profit Organizations, Santa Ana College
(SAC), Santa Ana Unified School District (SAUSD),
and University of California at Irvine (UCI)
School Site Meetings School Site Team GEAR UP
Staff MEETS QUARTERLY AS NEEDED
Padres Promotores Promotores GEAR UP
Staff MEETS MONTHLY AS NEEDED
GEAR UP Staff GEAR UP Staff from UCI
SAC MEETS WEEKLY
Higher Education Centers GEAR UP HEC
Counselors MEETS MONTHLY AS NEEDED
GEAR UP Administrative Team Principals, AP,
Partnership Reps MEETS MONTHLY AS NEEDED

5
Padres Promotores de la Educación Program
  • Parent volunteers serve as ambassadors of higher
    education
  • Educational System Resources
  • Community Resources
  • Provide parents with information through
    grassroots efforts
  • Home Visits
  • Pláticas (small group presentations or
    educational dialogues)
  • Workshops at Parent Conferences
  • Community-based Fairs Events
  • Parent Meetings

6
Training
  • 4-Day Training
  • Overview of program and workshop on topics, such
    as what it means to be a Promotor, team
    building, educational issues, and presentation
    skills.
  • Sample of Monthly training sessions
  • The transitions (elementary to intermediate to
    high school to college)
  • Options beyond high school
  • A-G Requirements
  • Financial Aid (FASFA) Scholarships
  • AB 540
  • College Admissions Applications

7
Program Structure
  • Teams of five to seven promotores
  • Organized per school groups (intermediate and
    high schools) and neighborhoods served by those
    school clusters
  • Coordinated by Promotor
  • Leaders 2 líderes per promotor group

8
Pláticas/Visitas Domiciliarias
  • Peer-to-Peer Parent Engagement
  • Link parents to school services
  • Provide information about higher education
  • Link families to school and community resources

9
Information Given to Families
  • High school graduation
  • requirements
  • University/college eligibility
  • requirements
  • Financial aid scholarships
  • Career options (majors) offered
  • in higher education
  • School transitions (elementary/intermediate/high
  • school/college)
  • How school districts and schools
  • function
  • Community resources

10
Evaluation of Outcomes
  • Padres Promotores training Evaluation of content
    and knowledge gained
  • Overall training received a 92.3 approval in
    evaluation
  • Ten-question pre/post test administered
  • Tracking Tools
  • Home Visit Form
  • Monthly Report
  • Number families reached through home visits
    pláticas
  • 1,600 families reached in 2004
  • 1,100 in 2005 received 2 visits or more
  • Difference due to emphasis on follow-up visits in
    2005
  • Exit interviews of participating promotores
  • What have you gained from being a Promotor?
  • What recommendations do you have for the future
    of the program?

11
Current Efforts
  • Postcards to evaluate each visit
  • Purpose Measure impact
  • Process Parent visited can mail remain
    anonymous
  • Work by Dr. Castellanos students (UCI)
  • Purpose Gauge change in attitudes toward
    education and higher education specifically
  • Process Interview 60 past promotores

12
Dissemination of Work
  • Each promotor introduced to principal, teachers,
    and school staff
  • Promotores introduced to partnership
  • FACT Sheets
  • Articles in Excelsior/Miniondas
  • Media coverage of special events and activities

13
Expanding the Impact
  • Orange County Business Council
  • Latino Educational Attainment Task Force
  • Developing a Common Message
  • Expanding to other communities in Orange County
  • Pio Pico, Santa Ana
  • Oakview, Huntington Beach
  • La Colonia, Anaheim
  • La Zanja, San Juan Capistrano

10 Commandments for Parents
  • Commit as a family to be involved in school
  • Learn how the schools are ordered (Preschool thru
    college)
  • Learn what my child needs to graduate
    successfully from high school
  • Support the learning of Mathematics, English, and
    Science
  • Understand how grades work (A, B, C, D, F)
  • Encourage your child to take honors and advanced
    courses
  • Help your child prepare for college early
  • Realize college is affordable
  • Do your part in helping your child study
  • Teach your child to hope and visualize their
    future

14
Formalized Curriculum
  • Padre a Padre Curriculum
  • 8 lessons created with the message of higher
    education in mind

15
Policy
  • Middle College High School
  • Higher Education Centers at each high school.
  • Issue-specific involvement in local Board of
    Education meetings and school site policy
    meetings
  • Advocacy for rigorous academic requirements
  • Dissemination of AB540 information to parents and
    community
  • Parent Centers at secondary schools
  • Camino de Amistad is now fully supported by
    each high school
  • Institutionalization Office space at Santa Ana
    College for Padres, permanent funding dedicated
    to program

16
Current Program Status
  • Strengths
  • The network grows 150 parents to date
  • The message of higher education is reaching a
    greater number of families, over 3,800 home
    visits have been facilitated since 2002
  • 10 Commandments for Parents are spread through
    county-based efforts with the Latino Educational
    Attainment Project through the OC Business
    Council
  • Padre a Padre curriculum developed published (8
    lessons)
  • Program is seen as a model being replicated in
    other communities
  • Walk for Success (Camino de Amistad) reaches high
    school families in the summer
  • Challenges
  • Large population, increasing demands, and limited
    time
  • Limited financial resources to expand
  • Full understanding of higher education focus by
    secondary school staff

17
Santa Ana Partnership
Padres Promotores de la Educación
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