ESI Update

Week of February 3

 

Hello, Principals and ESI Team Members!

Last week, during the State of the Union speech, President Obama stated, “We’re working to redesign high schools and partner them with colleges and employers that offer the real-world education and hands-on training that can lead directly to a job and career…to help young men of color facing tough odds stay on track and reach their full potential.” While President Obama did not spotlight particular ESI schools by name, we know that this historical and difficult work is taking place in your schools. Thank you for allowing the ESI community to learn with and from you.

In this issue you will find the following features:

  • News and Updates: February 11 Leadership Meeting!
  • Opportunities: Quest for Excellence, Digital Ready, and Letter from Birmingham Jail!
  • Program Spotlight: Screening of Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom 
  • Did You Know? Infographic on African American Male AP Participation Gap
  • Halls of ESI Schools: Frederick Douglass Academy VII
  • Shout Outs: Science Genius!

News and Updates

*This feature is intended to keep you up-to-date on what’s happening in ESI. 

ESI Leadership Meeting February 11

The next Leadership Meeting, designed for Principals and Assistant Principals, will take place February 11 from 9 a.m. – 12 p.m. At this meeting school leaders will have an opportunity to share strategies, struggles, and breakthroughs in working to prepare Black and Latino Males for college and career. Representation from every ESI school is expected at each of the Leadership Meetings.

When: February 11, 2014

Where: THE HISPANIC FEDERATION (55 EXCHANGE PL, New York, NY 10005)

Time: 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.

Registration: RSVP by clicking here.

Refreshments will be served.

ESI Liaison Meeting Resources available on the ESI Wiki

Resources from ESI Liaison Meetings are available on the ESI Wiki. Click here to access presentations, documents, and other important information.

 

 

Opportunities

Quest for Excellence NYC Award

The Quest for Excellence New York City Award is a local initiative of QuestBridge to give high-achieving, low-income high school juniors in New York City access to summer enrichment and travel programs, technology, professional networking, and academic opportunities, all in an effort to strengthen their college outlook.

Interested high school juniors in New York City should apply through the QuestBridge College Prep Scholarship application, including the Quest for Excellence NYC Award supplement.  By completing this application and supplement, students will have the chance to receive awards designed specifically to enhance their exposure to opportunities based on their extracurricular interests, background, and career goals, as well as to gain a network of like-minded individuals from the five boroughs of New York.  Note: Only students who list their permanent zip code from within the five boroughs will be eligible to access the NYC Award supplement.  

For more information about the NYC Award, please click here. For additional questions, please contact nycaward@questscholars.org.

College Fair/Conference for High School Counselors & College Advisors

High School Counselors, College Advisors, and ALL personnel engaged in supporting the college and career readiness of students in NYC public schools are encouraged to attend this full-day professional development opportunity. Presented by the Office of Safety and Youth Development in collaboration with the Office of Postsecondary Readiness, and Career Council, Inc., participants will have the opportunity to meet with college admission representatives from across the nation and attend relevant professional workshops to enhance college and career readiness planning in grades 9-12. Participants may register to attend either of the following event dates.

When: Thursday, February 27, 2014

8:00 a.m. – 3:30 p.m.

Where: Long Island University

1 University Plaza

Arnold and Marie Schwartz Athletic Center

Brooklyn, New York 11201

When: Friday, February 28, 2014

8:00 a.m. – 3:30 p.m.

Where: CUNY Lehman College

250 Bedford Park Blvd. West

Bronx, NY 10468

To register, click here. Registration for the event must be submitted no later than Friday, February 21, 2014. For further questions, contact Margarita Suero-Duran.

Digital Ready: Student-Centered Technology and Professional Development Program

As a reminder before next week’s deadline, ESI schools should consider the opportunity to apply for Digital Ready, a program launched out of the Office of Postsecondary Readiness. Digital Literacy was one of the strategies highlighted on the ESI application; it is an important strategy that ESI has identified that can impact the college and career readiness of Black and Latino young men. The Digital Ready program can support your school to create a learning environment that matches your students’ needs and interests through the use of technology. Schools that are selected to participate will receive support for planning and implementing the program, professional development for teachers, software to support blended learning and assessment, and guidance on partnering with digital media learning organizations.

To be eligible, your school must meet the following criteria:

• Demonstrate evidence of investment in digital learning, including infrastructure and professional development

• Have scored an A, B, or C on the Progress Report

• If your school received a Quality Review, have scored a Proficient or Well-Developed (if your school received a Quality Review and scored a Developing, it will only be considered if your school scored an A or B on the Progress Report).

Applications are due by 5:00 p.m. on February 14. To apply, review the program overview. Then complete the application according to the instructions. Submit the completed application with any supporting materials to the Digital Ready team at team@digitalready.net.

Scholarship for Undocumented Students in New York State

A $25 million college scholarship fund was recently launched to ensure that at least 2,500 youths can afford college for the next decade. The prerequisite? The youths have to be undocumented and must have been approved for a 2012 presidential initiative, the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, which granted temporary work authorization and legal presence.

The scholarships, accessible through TheDream.us website, help to fund undocumented youths who are “not eligible to apply for federal financial aid to support a college education” for 12 institutions of higher learning. Due to their legal status, undocumented immigrants are allowed to attend college, but ineligible for any federal and most state sources of aid. Many other scholarships require applicants to be legal immigrants or U.S. citizens. In at least six states, undocumented students are explicitly prohibited from receiving in-state tuition or even enrolling at public institutions. This TheDream.us scholarship would thus give undocumented students more access to the same opportunities as lawful residents.

The multi-state fund is one of the largest offered to undocumented students, who are generally unable to shoulder the cost of a higher education due to financial or legal constraints. As it stands, only five to ten percent of undocumented high school graduates pursue a college education.  Scholarships range between $12,000 to $25,000 per year and provide 100 percent funding for tuition, fees, and books. Students must maintain a cumulative 3.0 GPA and are eligible for an additional $1,000 to $2,000 honors award if they graduate with a GPA of 3.5 or greater.

The partner colleges are located in California, Florida, New York, Texas, and Washington, D.C.

The deadline to apply is March 31, 2014.  For more information, click here.   To apply, click here.

Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Letter from Birmingham Jail

In celebration of Black History Month, The Schomburg Junior Scholars present a theatrical reading of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail”. This theatrical reading, as conceived by Artistic Director Shaun Neblett, portrays a group of high school students who must read and interpret Dr. King’s Letter from Birmingham Jail in order to fulfill their graduation requirements.  As they strive to make sense of Dr. King’s 50 year old letter, scenes from contemporary times illuminate their understanding and make the messages relevant for today. Shows begin Monday, February 10. For more information or to register, click here.

 

 

Program Spotlight

*This feature is intended to give you insight into what is happening in ESI. We hope you enjoy your “visit”!

Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom Film Screening

This week, thanks to a generous donation by the Weinstein Company, 700 students and staff from 14 ESI schools were afforded the opportunity to attend a screening of Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom. Students saw Nelson Mandela’s life journey from his childhood to his years as an advocate and freedom fighter to spending over 20 years in prison and then becoming the first democratically elected president of South Africa. This is a part of an ongoing series of ESI Young Men Gatherings that started in December with 320 young men taking in a performance of Martin and Music.

The series will continue on Thursday, February 27th, with It’s Halftime, an organization that provides disadvantaged young people pursuing careers in sports and entertainment, with a mentality that ensures that they are prepared to reach and maximize their dreams. On Tuesday, March 25th, young men from ESI schools will have an opportunity to hear from a meet award-winning actor, singer, writer, composer and spoken word artist, Daniel Beaty.

Thanks to the staff from schools who brought students to the Magic Johnson Theater in Harlem and the Court Street Theater in downtown Brooklyn: Queens Vocational and Technical HS, School for Human Rights, New Design HS, Brooklyn HS for Law and Technology, Academy for Young Writers, Channel View School for Research, Teachers Prep, HS for Sports Management, Exploration Academy, Urban Assembly for Careers in Sports, Thurgood Marshall Academy, Mott Hall Bronx HS and Eagle Academy.

 

 

 

 

The Halls of ESI Schools

Scenes from Frederick Douglass Academy VII

In addition to bulletin boards focuses on information on colleges and pictures of various pro-social bonding experiences for the young men at the schools, the hallways are lined with pictures of each FDA VII student. The portraits are taken during freshman year (or upon arrival for students who enter after ninth grade) and remain on the wall throughout the duration of high school. While the picture-lined hallway has been a tradition at the school, to promote a school-wide culture of college readiness, students who get a 75 or higher on their ELA regents and/or an 80 or higher on their Math Regents are recognized with a “College Ready Gold Star”.

 

 

Shout Outs

Shout-Out to the following schools that will be participating in Science Genius this semester with Professor Chris Emdin and GZA from the Wu-Tang Clan!

  • High School for Law and Public Service
  • Queens Preparatory Academy
  • Academy for Young Writers
  • Channel View School for Research
  • New Design High School
  • High School for Service & Learning at Erasmus
  • Transit Tech Career and Technical Education High School
  • Bronx Leadership Academy II High School
  • Thurgood Marshall Academy for Learning and Social Change
  • School for Human Rights
  • Explorations Academy
  • Urban Assembly School for Careers in Sports
  • High School for Law Enforcement and Public Safety

Shout-Out to the staff at Frederick Douglass Academy VII (FDA VII) High School who started their 4 part CRE Sessions with Michelle Knight! Through these sessions, we hope to build institutional capacity among adults to support Black and Latino young men and change mindsets among school professionals to ensure all key staff recognize there cultural beliefs that may impact students at their school.

Do you have a strategy, teacher, or program at your school that you wish to highlight? If so, send an email to rhaynes6@schools.nyc.gov for inclusion in our ESI Weekly Update.

 

 

“Success always leaves footprints.”

–Booker T. Washington

 

 

 

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