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THE
REST OF THE STORY
On Sunday, Monday and Tuesday,
July 18, 19 and 20, 2004, the the Chicago Tribune devoted
half its front page, plus full inside pages of the first section of the paper to
a Special Report: No Child Left Behind. The focus of this series was ona
little girl named Rayola. The title was: "One
Girl's Struggle to find a Future". You can read this series at http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/specials/
It does a great job of drawing
attention to the challenges kids living in inner-city neighborhoods face.
In Chicago during the 2003-04 school year, 270,000 students were eligible to transfer to better schools. 19,000 applied to transfer. 1,097 were granted transfers and 536 actually transferred. The student profiled in this series was one of those who transferred. As the series unfolds, readers see the struggle. In a July 22 editorial, the Tribune summarizes the problem by saying, "as the story of Rayola shows, no well-intentioned law, no well-intentioned school, can succeed without the follow-through of a child's parent."
In short, blame the parent. The T/MC agrees that the parent is a child's primary tutor and mentor. However, families living in neighborhoods of concentrated poverty face many struggles that families in other neighborhoods don't face. Unfortunately this series did not show this part of the problem, or how few family support systems are in place in this area. Nor did the series provide a path for involvement to volunteers, business leaders and others who might want to become an extended family of support for children like Rayola.
That's THE REST OF THE
STORY. The map below shows the Englewood neighborhood
where Rayola lives and the location of Holmes school, which is
on the NCLB watch list. It shows that this is a
neighborhood with high concentrations of poverty and many
poorly performing schools. Thousands of K-12 children
live in this area. The all need extra help.
Here's how you find out where you can help: Search the Find A
Program link on this web site to determine what
(if any) tutoring and/or mentoring programs are operating in this
neighborhood (search 60609, 60615, 60636 and 60621 zip codes). These
are places where you can be a volunteer, leader, donor or business
partner. In this case, there are too few programs, and not enough
comprehensive programs. If you search the resource
links on this site, or on the http://www.tutormentorconnection.org
site, you can find examples of outstanding programs operating
in other neighborhoods and other cities. These types of
programs could be in
this and other poverty neighborhoods of Chicago if there were a greater
involvement from those who have the ability and resources to
help.
We encourage Volunteers, Donors and
Leaders to turn this negative into a positive. Get involved.
Together we can help assure that No
Child in Chicago is Left Behind. Visit
the T/MC Map Gallery to see more maps like this.
This map is a service of the Tutor/Mentor Connection, a small non-profit organization. If you'd like to make a contribution to help us produce more maps like this, and maintain the Program Locator service, email tutormentor2@earthlink.net for information.