Baltimore winters are typically snowed under ice storms and blisteringly cold winds from the west. I’m not a fan. Instead, winter has become my motivation to plan summer vacations. During these times of fiscal austerity however, I’ve postponed the summer tropical get-away. Even still, I look forward to visiting family and friends spread across the country, taking in the summer sun winding along the harbor, perusing the DC museum circuit, and maybe picking back up on my Portuguese lessons.
Unfortunately, for most low-income children, the reality of summer looks nothing like this. When the school doors close for the summer, too many Baltimore children are set loose to play on the streets unsupervised, or because of safety concerns, are forced to stay indoors, isolated and lonely.
Summer is the perfect time to engage children in community service projects, real-world learning activities, and experiential learning projects; boost academic achievement; cultivate work force-ready skills and career interest; expose children to sports, arts, and new places. Too often as a community, preparation for summer in this regard becomes a last-minute agenda item like filing tax-returns or holiday shopping.
My audacious idea is that while the ground is still frozen, we intentionally capitalize on existing infrastructure and support for after-school programs and work to expand such support to include the critical summer months—when investments in youth often diminish. The National Center for Summer Learning has engaged with City Schools, the Enoch Pratt Library System and City Department of Recreation and Parks to begin this work; but, this effort alone is not enough to guarantee access for 80,000 plus children.
As the evidence of the benefits of summer learning programs have increased, the few public funding streams at the local and school levels have dwindled. To ensure large-scale, high-quality summer programming in the city is available for all children, increased public investment and strategic coordination among public agencies, schools, community program providers and parents are essential.
It’s audacious to be intentional about using summer as leverage for 21st century skill-building, character development and the experiential education our children need to excel. To wait until the snow melts or the spring showers downpour—essentially scrambling at the last minute—will leave many of our children without access to enriching activities resulting in well-documented academic learning loss and exposure to a number of behavioral risks.
Ultimately, increased public financing and city-wide coordination is the only practical way to achieve sustainable, large-scale investment in quality summer programs. This winter, the responsibility is ours to figure out how collaboration can compensate for the lack of adequate funding to ensure access to a wide range of summer learning opportunities for all Baltimore youth.
Amen to this idea!
Our organization, Art on Purpose, spends a good part of the regular academic year preparing high schoolers through our Art Leadership Program to be strong candidates for summer jobs in the arts. An increase in after-school/out-of-school activities during the summer would only increase the opportunities for our youth to be a part of the solution as effective employees and/or interns as part of these programs.
Systemic problems require systemic solutions.
Outstanding idea. I hope it can be applied not only to high school aged kids, but to younger kids, too. More supervision would be needed for the younger kids, but the prospect of their learning during the summer as well as during the school year would be exciting to the younger children.
Parks & People Foundation has some wonderful programs for youth — especially its SuperKids Camp. They have all the statistics as to how and why these programs are so effective. And there are other examples of wonderful organizations offering high-quality programs to fill this great need. And there are studies that prove the need is real and that summer camp programs work.
What’s missing? Money. Prioritize putting our resources into people and see the amazing payback within a generation.
Its a beautiful idea. Your conclusion is right on about ‘compensating’ for lack of public funding. Have we progressed at all since the 50-60′s? Well the local elementary school which I attended was open in the summer and the, art and SPORTS are a very fond memory, but more important THE center of our neighborhood youth culture at that time.
I absolutely love this idea. I think it’s actually something that can require minimal funding with volunteer support and creativity. Let us know how to help you get it done.
Andy – Thanks so much for your comment. Please feel free to reach out to me at ashley.stewart@jhu.edu so we can connect. – Ashley