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IDENTIFYING

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Funding for this project is generously provided by the Mott Foundation. Collaborative Partners: GISD, MCC, MMC, MDE – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: IDENTIFYING


1
IDENTIFYING WORKING WITH STUDENTS of
POVERTYMEMCA CONFERENCEMarch 14, 2014
Funding for this project is generously provided
by the Mott Foundation. Collaborative Partners
GISD, MCC, MMC, MDE
2
46 Million Americans 15 of the population live
in poverty.
3
  • 80 of Americas wealth is owned by 4 of the
    population.
  • 40 of it is owned by 1 of the population.

4
  • QUESTIONS
  • What do you believe causes poverty?
  • Where do your beliefs come from?
  • Were they passed down from your parents?
  • Did you learn them from your community?
  • Do you have your own experience with poverty?
  • How are your experiences and exposure to
    opportunities, while growing up, different than
    students and families you serve?
  • Are you armed with relevant facts about poverty?
  • Are you able to suspend judgment and understand
    people are making the best decisions possible
    from their perspective?

5
16 Million U.S. Children 1 out of 5, live in
families that struggle to put food on the table.
6
  • Nationally, the average welfare check for one
    parent and two children is 478 per month.
  • Twenty years ago, it was 408.
  • The average disability check is 600.
  • Less than 2 of the federal budget is allocated
    for welfare.

7
  • Nearly 1 in 3 Americans experienced a stint of
    poverty between 2009 2011.

8
  • The suburban poverty rate in the U.S. in 2012 was
    11.3

9
  • Rural poverty has exceeded urban poverty every
    year since the 60s.

10
  • 1 in 4 working households in America spend more
    than half of their pre-tax income on housing.
  • In 2012, the National Low Income Housing
    Coalition conducted a study that examined the
    cost of housing across the United States, and
    found that no city had rentals priced low enough
    where a minimum wage earner could live
    comfortably.

11
  • Youth living in poverty are the least likely to
    become educated in our nation.
  • People living in poverty often experience
    education as stress and see it as a place they
    do not belong.

12
  • A college education appears to be the only
    possibility to help people break the walls of
    poverty and escape its hardships yet today, it
    is less likely a person in poverty will attain a
    college education than it was in the 1940s.

13
  • GENERATIONAL POVERTY
  • Two or more generations born into poverty
  • Family never owned land
  • Highly mobile
  • Evictions/Shut Offs
  • First to graduate from high school
  • Has never known anyone who benefited from
    education
  • High rate of family illiteracy
  • Has never been respected in a job
  • Lack of tools/skill set to move out of poverty
  • Emphasis on survival
  • Focus is on making it through the day

14
  • URBAN POVERTY
  • Metropolitan areas of 50,000 or more
  • Complex aggregate of chronic and acute stressors
  • Overcrowding
  • Noise
  • Violence
  • Less green spaces
  • Low air and water quality
  • Many of the housing options are old and
    deteriorated often not well kept
  • Inconsistent health care
  • Dependent on large city services which are often
    inadequate

15
  • RURAL POVERTY
  • Rural poverty rate is higher than urban rate of
    poverty
  • Non metropolitan areas
  • Much longer distance to services and educational
    options/no public transit
  • Fewer job opportunities
  • More single guardian households
  • Less access to services, such as health care and
    disability services
  • Lack of cultural experiences such as museums and
    libraries
  • Fewer opportunities for quality education and
    post-secondary options

16
  • SITUATIONAL POVERTY
  • Often caused by a sudden crisis or loss
  • Environmental disasters
  • Divorce
  • Health issues
  • Family death
  • Job loss or economic slowdown
  • More likely to bounce back and finish education
  • Often temporary
  • Can lose health care options which can perpetuate
    health crises
  • Major income drop impacting lifestyle
  • Often surrounded by people who are educated or
    able to earn a living wage
  • Attendance is accepted norm
  • Have not internalized the poverty as a personal
    problem
  • Often does not realize the advantage of growing
    up middle class

17
  • RELATIVE POVERTY
  • Economic income of a family whose income is
    insufficient to meet its societys average
    standard of living
  • Working, but rarely have money for extras
  • Live paycheck to paycheck
  • Often teased or harassed by more affluent
    students
  • Often lack financial means to participate in
    activities of classmates
  • Often reluctant to have friends over to see their
    home because it does not compare with
  • most of the other students housing.
  • Few have health care
  • Focus on making it two weeks or through the month
  • Poverty seen as personal deficiency

18
  • CULTURAL POVERTY
  • Have little or no financial resources
  • Face language and cultural barriers
  • Often struggling to straddle two cultures
  • Lack understanding of norms of second culture
  • May slip through the cracks
  • Extended family may be in another country
  • Or, may be multiple family members and
    multi-generational family members in home
  • Often do better than those born into poverty in
    America
  • Poverty is viewed as a system problem

19
  • ATTRIBUTES OF STUDENTS IN POVERTY
  • Poverty can undermine the development of self and
    the capacity of self-determination and
    self-efficacy.
  • Strained resources correlate directly with poor
    school attendance, lower grades and lower chances
    of attending college.
  • More stressors in family means they receive less
    positive reinforcement. More stress riddled
    attachments with parents, teachers and adult
    caregivers.
  • Often lack a caring, dependable adult. Strains in
    attachments and added stressors often lead to
    behavioral issues in school.
  • Fewer books at home, more time watching TV or
    video games. Transportation issues.
  • So. these students are facing
  • Social and emotional challenges, including
    depression
  • Acute and chronic stressors
  • Cognitive lags
  • Health and safety issues
  • More limited coping skills
  • Poor, short-term memory

20
Differences in the Brain Function Between High
and Low SES
Brain function was measured by means of an
electroencephalograph (EEG) - basically, a cap
fitted with electrodes to measure electrical
activity in the brain like that used to assess
epilepsy, sleep disorders and brain
tumors. Kids from lower socioeconomic levels
show brain physiology patterns similar to someone
who actually had damage in the frontal lobe as an
adult, said Robert Knight, director of the
institute and a UC Berkeley professor of
psychology. We found that kids are more likely
to have a low response if they have low
socioeconomic status, though not everyone who is
poor has low frontal lobe responses. http//ww
w.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2008/12/images/
eeg-brain.gif
21
  • WHAT CAN WE DO?
  • The adjustments we make to support our students
  • dealing with poverty help all our students.

22
  • OUR ATTITUDES
  • Debunk myths
  • Know the culture of your community
  • Have high expectations for all students
  • Make decisions with your own children in mind
  • Believe in the student and their ability

23
  • OUR BEHAVIOR
  • Role model appropriate behavior
  • Embody respect
  • Be inclusive
  • Focus on the gifts, not the deficits
  • Celebrate successes
  • Show empathy and cultural awareness
  • Connect students to mentors whenever possible

24
  • SCHOOL POLICY CURRICULA
  • Advisory groups
  • Embed social skills
  • Use differentiated instruction
  • Use all the senses and address all learning
    styles
  • Incorporate reading interventions
  • Utilize vocabulary in all disciplines
  • Mastery learning/nothing lower than a C
  • Be ready to change classroom practice
  • Address knowledge gaps

25
Panel
  • Dan Seder- principal/Bay Middle College
  • Lisa Reaume- counselor/Monroe Co.Middle College
  • Katherine Carr- teacher/Mott Middle College

26
  • Team Time
  • The Great Inversion Were in the midst of the
    Great Inversion, writes Alan Ehrnhalt (2012) a
    journalist and analyst at the Pew Center on the
    States. Put simply, in the United States,
    affluent people are moving back to the cities as
    lower-income people move out to the suburbs. The
    social ramifications of this flip-flop are
    far-reaching. One positive outcome is the
    potential for greater school integration along
    race and class lines as both cities and suburbs
    become more diverse. Ed Leadership/May
    2013

27
  • Resources
  • 2010 Census Bureau Report
  • Faces of Poverty. (2013). Education Leadership,
    www.ascd.org
  • LeBlanc-Esparza, R., Roulston, W.(2012)
    Breaking the Poverty Barrier Changing Student
    Lives with Passion, Perseverance, and
    Performance. Bloomington, IN Solution Tree
  • Tileston, D. Darling, S. (2008) Why Culture
    Counts Teaching Children of Poverty.
    Bloomington, IN Solution Tree
  • Payne, R.K. (2001) A Framework for Understanding
    Poverty. Highland, TX Aha Press.
  • Beegle, D.(2007) See Poverty.Be the Difference.
    Portland, OR Communication Across Barriers, inc.

28
Contact Information
  • Kerry Moore
  • Mott Middle College
  • 810.232.8703
  • kmoore_at_geneseeisd.org
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