Education Awards nearly $7 million for Promise Neighborhoods grants

By: Mireya Garcia, Office of Elementary and Secondary Education

All students deserve to grow up in communities that foster their success through strong family and community support systems to prepare them for academic success in college, career and beyond. On Monday, the U.S. Department of Education awarded $6.9 million to 7 grantees across 6 states through the Promise Neighborhoods program which provides funding to support students from cradle to career. This grant competition distributes funds to non-profit organizations, institutions of higher education, and Indian/Native American Tribes to provide cradle to career solutions to the needs of children and families impacted by poverty.

Promise Neighborhoods also provide a unique opportunity for communities to create a comprehensive approach to help prevent and address violence in their neighborhoods. Funds can support a broad approach that allows grantees to coordinate mental health professionals, the criminal justice system, economic or workforce development organizations, and community leaders to intervene in areas with high rates of violence. This type of neighborhood-driven planning has been crucial in gun violence efforts, in partnership across federal agencies with the White House of Gun Violence Prevention. Current grantees have engaged with Parks Departments, Departments of Justice, and local community organizations to focus on creating safe public spaces such as parks and more walkable communities, improving both safety and wellness in their neighborhoods, and creating a safe passage for students to get to school. Grantees have also focused on increasing attendance and graduation rates as well as community mentoring to mitigate violence among teens.

This year’s competition included three competitive priories: Strengthening Cross-Agency Coordination and Community Engagement to Advance Systemic Change, Applications from New Potential Grantees, and Promoting Equity in Student Access to Educational Resources and Opportunities. The notice also included one invitational priority for grantees to address chronic absenteeism. Six grantees supported the program’s invitational priority to address chronic absenteeism. Select abstracts are profiled below:

Walker County Promise Neighborhoods – Walker County, Alabama

In partnership with Jasper City Schools, the United Way of Central Alabama will create a cradle to career pipeline for students that is unique to the rural context of the City of Jasper and Walker County, Alabama. Pipeline services that will be added during the grant include: (1) expanded learning opportunities through out-of-schooltime programs, (2) partnerships between schools and community resources, and (3) support for school and workforce transitions.

Jubilee Park Promise Neighborhoods Initiative (Jubilee PNI) – Dallas, Texas

Jubilee Park & Community Center will work with a high-need LEA (Dallas Independent School District), two IHEs (Southern Methodist University and Dallas College), and local community organizations to achieve equity in the community and expand student access to higher education. Jubilee PNI activities will include Head Start, a food pantry, primary and behavioral healthcare, child developmental assessments, Teen Club, Youth Sports, Out of School Time programs, Specialized Support Services, Community Policing, wellness programming, workforce development, senior housing and activities, home repair and emergency rental assistance (Seeds of Hope), and new Youth Transitions programming for teens and young adults through age 24.

East Oakland Promise Neighborhood (EOPN) – Oakland, California

The East Oakland Promise Neighborhood will bring together non-profit Oakland Promise, Oakland Unified School District, Peralta Community College District, and more than a dozen local community-based organizations to establish a person-centered, family-friendly, and culturally-inclusive cradle-to-career pipeline of services to support young people to succeed in their education and enable families to thrive. The EOPN’s overall objectives are (1) Increase safety and stability within the community, decreasing displacement/mobility of Black, Brown, and other marginalized communities; (2) Increase students’ holistic academic development/proficiency, integrating social-emotional learning and 21st-century skill-development across TK-12 into post-secondary education, and (3) Increase families’ access to wrap-around services to support the holistic well-being of children as well as family well-being and success.

The transformative vision of the Promise Neighborhoods initiative is that all children and youth growing up in Promise Neighborhoods have access to high quality supports, ensuring school readiness, high school graduation, and access to a community-based continuum of high-quality services. Today’s funding announcement creates an onramp for more students to be able to access such services.

To learn more about the Promise Neighborhoods program, please visit Promise Neighborhoods (PN) – Office of Elementary and Secondary Education.

Engaging Students in STEM Education Beyond Technology

By: Samyukta Dinesh, Policy Fellow, Office of the Deputy Secretary, U.S. Department of Education

When we talk about science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) education, it’s easy to picture coding camps, robotics clubs, or students experimenting with augmented reality. These tools are exciting and undeniably transformative, but they’re only one piece of a much larger puzzle. STEM isn’t just about mastering new technologies, it’s a mindset—a way of solving problems, and a lens through which students can explore and make sense of the world.

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Raising the Bar on College Affordability

By: Roberto J. Rodríguez, Assistant Secretary, Office of Planning, Evaluation and Policy Development, U.S. Department of Education

Since day one, increasing the size and buying power of the Pell Grant has been a priority and a core feature of the Biden-Harris Administration’s broader agenda to tackle college access and affordability, and support success for all students. With bipartisan support from Congress, the Administration has increased the maximum Pell Grant to $7,395 for the current academic year. This is a $900 boost to the maximum award and the largest in a decade, reaching approximately 1.2 million additional students to help them attend college and earn their degree. The Administration continues to advance President Biden’s goal of doubling the maximum Pell Grant award by 2029 and believes this is one of the best federal investments that can be made to build a strong middle class and a strong economy.

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New Resources to Support Educator Recruitment, Retention, and Diversity are Now Available

An educator sitting at a table in a classroom with three young students.

By: Roberto J. Rodríguez, Assistant Secretary, Office of Planning, Evaluation and Policy Development and Adam Schott, Acting Assistant Secretary, Office of Elementary and Secondary Education, U.S. Department of Education

From day one, the Biden-Harris Administration has taken steps to elevate the teaching profession and address the educator shortage through unprecedented investments to better prepare, develop, and retain talented and diverse educators in America’s schools. The U.S. Department of Education today released two new resources to highlight best practices, including examples from the field, to support States and local educational agencies (LEAs) in strengthening and diversifying the educator workforce.

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The Impact of K-12 STEM Policy

The Impact of K-12 STEM Policy

Throughout my childhood, my parents involved my sister and me in educational activities outside of school. While other kids took a summer break, our parents ensured we continued to apply and expand upon what we had learned during the school year. This commitment led us to participate in various summer programs, including six-week-long bridge courses and weeklong camps designed to ignite students’ interest in science. In hindsight, I realize that these opportunities were available to us as a direct result of educational policies aimed at guiding students’ learning experiences and fostering a skilled and engaged workforce.

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Strategies for Improving Inclusivity for Individuals with Disabilities in the Workplace

"Strategies for Improving Inclusivity for Individuals with Disabilities in the Workplace"

By: Robert D. Morissette, Special Assistant, Office of the Deputy Secretary

October is National Disability Employment Awareness Month.

More than 70 million Americans report having a disability. Even though people with disabilities are part of every community, a 2023 Bureau of Labor Statistics report showed only 22.5% of people who identify with having at least one disability are employed (compared to 65.8% of people without disabilities). We must continue to raise the bar on our standards to ensure that all workplaces are inclusive settings, where people with disabilities feel valued, and set the expectations that allow people with disabilities to succeed.

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New AI Toolkit to Empower Educational Leaders on Safe, Ethical, and Equitable AI Integration

New AI Toolkit to Empower Educational Leaders on Safe, Ethical, and Equitable AI Integration

The U.S. Department of Education’s (Department’s) Office of Educational Technology today released Empowering Education Leaders : A Toolkit for Safe, Ethical, and Equitable AI Integration, a new resource designed to support school leaders as they make plans to leverage artificial intelligence’s (AI’s) benefits for teaching and student learning while managing its risks. Responding directly to President Biden’s October 2023 Executive Order on the Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy Development and Use of Artificial Intelligence, this toolkit provides actionable guidance for state and local education leaders to develop a strategy for AI use that is safe, secure, and trustworthy while enhancing student learning outcomes.

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U.S. Department of Education Launches $1 Million CTE CHIPS Challenge

The U.S. Department of Education (Department) today launched the Career and Technical Education (CTE) CHIPS Challenge, a $1 million prize competition, funded by the Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act of 2006 (Perkins V) that seeks to expand student recruitment, training, and placement strategies in good-paying semiconductor fabrication (fab) construction and advanced manufacturing careers. White House Domestic Policy Advisor Neera Tanden announced the CHIPS Challenge at a career and technical education roundtable in Detroit, Michigan today. Full details, including how to apply, are available at CTEChipsChallenge.com; submissions are due on December 20, 2024 at 8:00 PM ET.

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Five Ways to be a School Parent Superhero

A purple graphic with white text: "Five Ways to be a School Parent Superhero."

As parents, we have an incredible superpower: From everyday moments, we grow true and deep connections with our kids. When we spend quality time, create routines, and listen to and learn from them, we come to know their ever-evolving strengths and challenges better than anyone.

Similarly, parents often come to know their child’s school by prioritizing meaningful opportunities to connect, to learn, and to engage. In fact, family-school engagement has been proven to help get kids more engaged in school, more motivated, and earning better grades. It can improve your child’s emotional and mental health – all while laying a foundation of success for your child at school.

Want to deepen those connections & be a school parent superhero? Start with these five tips based on research & conversations with families across the country:

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What’s Next as Borrowers Return to Repayment

One year ago, Congress restarted student loan payments, and already more borrowers are current on their federal student loans than were before the payment pause began. Borrowers now have only three months until they face consequences for late payments – making our work to support student borrowers and reform the broken student loan system more important than ever. 

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Raising the Bar on College Excellence and Equity: Update on the Postsecondary Success Recognition Program

By: James Kvaal, U.S. Under Secretary of Education

Too often, the conversation on higher education focuses on a handful of colleges and universities that were founded centuries ago, have huge endowments and sparkling facilities, and admit very few students. While our country is lucky to have these institutions, we also need colleges and universities that are innovative, affordable, and inclusive – and that help students from all backgrounds graduate and find a career.

Secretary Cardona’s Raise the Bar initiative supports colleges that excel at pursuing a variety of missions. As part of that work, we launched Postsecondary Success Recognition Program in April 2024, a program that uses data and evidence to identify exemplars across the country. Today, after receiving feedback from the public on program design, we’re publishing the list of 200 institutions that clearly have a story to tell that demonstrates what institutions do matters to ensure student success – and inviting those institutions to submit an application to be recognized for their efforts.   

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Resources for Communities Following Natural Disasters

Recent natural disasters have significantly impacted communities and their education institutions. Since 2017, there have been over 500 presidentially declared major disasters across all 50 states, Puerto Rico, and U.S. Outlying Areas. The U.S. Department of Education (ED) closely follows the impacts of natural disasters on students, educators, staff, families, and others. Schools are a critical aspect of whole community recovery and provide education, nutrition, physical fitness, mental health counseling, and other resources to students and their families during day-to-day operations. When schools close after a natural disaster, it is critical that these resources remain available to the community and that schools are reopened and operating as soon as possible. In 2018, to better assist schools in dealing with impacts of natural disasters, ED’s Office of Elementary and Secondary Education formed a Disaster Recovery Unit (DRU) with the goal of increasing resources dedicated to K-12 schools disaster recovery efforts. ED’s Federal Student Aid (FSA) office and Office of Postsecondary Education (OPE) offer support to postsecondary schools.

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