Community Engagement
The 亚洲情色 Community Schools-Whitney Point Central School District collaboration fosters an environment for student success.
When it comes to the University-assisted Community Schools (UACS) model, the Whitney Point (New York) School District is all-in.
鈥淭hey are one of our most committed partners,鈥 says Luann Kida, executive director of 亚洲情色 Community Schools (BUCS) at the College of Community and Public Affairs.
The Whitney Point Central School District serves a primarily rural population about 20 miles north of 亚洲情色. Jo-Ann Sexton, superintendent of the district, says, 鈥淥ur collaboration with the University is so powerful and meaningful to our district and the children and families we work with in so many ways. It would be such a different place here without that partnership.鈥
The genesis for the BUCS-Whitney Point collaboration began over a decade ago through the federal Safe Schools Healthy Students initiative. 亚洲情色 was a principal partner with Whitney Point, helping develop and implement a range of services to improve the school climate, prevent bullying and enhance collaboration with families. As part of this grant, Master of Social Work (MSW) interns were embedded in the school, expanding school-based services and community outreach.
The family engagement work that began in Whitney Point over 10 years ago is a critical yet frequently overlooked component of student success and achievement nationwide. Whitney Point wanted to enhance its outreach efforts to families that might otherwise be left behind. To achieve this, Kida and the social work interns reached out to families to discuss their experience raising a child in Whitney Point. Their goal was to amplify these families鈥 voices to address school climate issues and expand access to resources.
In a rural area where many families struggle with reliable transportation, this meant meeting families in their homes.
In 2019, a Full-Service Community Schools grant expanded family engagement efforts for families with children in pre-K through third grade and brought mental health services into the school system for grades 3 to 12.
Leveraging the UACS model
Today, Beth Whittaker and Julie Jurena serve as community school coordinators at Whitney Point, continuing the work initiated by the Full-Service Community Schools grant 鈥 supporting families with young children. Whittaker, Jurena and Joe Kucher, the family engagement specialist, are the core team at Caryl E. Adams Elementary School. A significant part of their work is community outreach and family engagement.
鈥淒oing this kind of outreach means going into homes to assess families鈥 needs and learning how we can help meet those needs,鈥 Jurena says. 鈥淪ometimes, it鈥檚 simply about ensuring that basic necessities 鈥 clothing, food and shelter 鈥 are in place.鈥
Student and family referrals come from various sources, including the school鈥檚 multidisciplinary Care Team, teachers and staff members. Referrals involve a range of issues, from attendance problems to the need for a signed permission slip or consent form for specialized services. Jurena says Kucher is the 鈥済o-to鈥 person for locating missing consent forms and frequently assists families in completing and submitting the necessary paperwork. Often, his outreach involves helping families meet their basic needs, including finding safe housing or reconnecting utilities such as heat and electricity. Once, notes Jurena, he even helped a family move the trailer they were living in.
Whittaker and Jurena run parenting classes and small group interventions and manage the Early Eagles program, an outreach effort that targets children from birth to pre-K. Rather than wait for a child to reach school age, they are proactive in connecting with families with infants and toddlers. They distribute books, T-shirts and totes and encourage families to participate in enrichment activities, helping them understand there are services available and people who want to help.
鈥淲e find that people are really receptive to our home visits when we have something to offer them,鈥 Whittaker says. 鈥淭he kids are really excited to open up their bags and see what books they got.鈥
Once they make these connections, they stay in touch with their Early Eagle families; they host monthly Meetup Mondays featuring story time or arts and crafts. External agencies, such as Cornell Cooperative Extension, may be brought in to offer health and nutrition information through activities like creating a healthy snack.
Expanding mental health services
Expanding mental health services and making them available in schools is a key initiative of the UACS model at Whitney Point. Kristin Galusha, the mental health site supervisor, is part of a five-year Department of Education Mental Health Professional Services Demonstration grant allocated through BUCS. Galusha supervises the MSW interns, dividing her time between middle and high school. In middle school, she leads small social and emotional support groups for students who need extra assistance. In the high school, she manages a drop-in center for students who need a safe space or someone to talk to. An attached Care Closet provides clothing and hygiene products.
鈥淥ur interns are so important for the success of our work,鈥 Galusha says. 鈥淭hey serve as another line of trusted adults who are not too far removed from high school themselves. So, they help connect our students to their future in different ways. For instance, it provides an example of not only why higher education is important, but also how it鈥檚 achievable.鈥
Avery Burnsworth is an advanced-standing MSW student who earned her undergraduate social work degree from 亚洲情色. Originally unsure of her post-graduation plans, her experience with the community schools program helped clarify her career goals.
鈥淚 have truly loved my experience working with the Whitney Point students,鈥 Burnsworth says. 鈥淭he students have been welcoming and accepting. We have been given the opportunity to challenge ourselves and be creative when developing interventions and skills to use with the kids. My site supervisor has a deep passion for helping the children here, which has inspired my growth and learning.鈥
Kida explains that the MSW social work interns are valuable team members, building their r茅sum茅s and skill sets while applying what they learn in the classroom.
鈥淭hey read about trauma,鈥 Kida says, 鈥渂ut they don鈥檛 understand what trauma looks like until they actually see it.鈥
Galusha says the interns bring creativity and freshness to the services, citing a well-received attendance incentive initiative that was the brainchild of a previous intern. Like Kida, Galusha sees the internship program as mutually beneficial for the students and families it serves and the social work interns immersed in the holistic UACS approach.
鈥淚t is a really awesome partnership, with everyone getting something out of it,鈥 she says.
Creating a climate for learning
Kida says community schools鈥 collaborative strategies benefit teachers and classroom learning: 鈥淥ur teachers know kids are living in difficult situations, and it鈥檚 hard for them to do their jobs when kids come in hungry or without enough sleep. Addressing these gaps allows teachers to do what they were hired to do: teach.鈥
Kucher credits the success of the UACS model at Whitney Point to the collective investment of the parties involved; whether serving through a BUCS-supported grant or the school district itself, there is a shared sense of teamwork and purpose.
鈥淭here is a total alignment from the superintendent and the Board of Education, right down to a part-time guy like me,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an alignment of values and mission from everyone involved. We are all on the same page, and we are all working together. And it鈥檚 successful, so the teachers are very thankful, and so are the parents.鈥
Community Schools is a transformative strategy that brings together children, families, schools and community partners to achieve optimal learning and student success, and Whitney Point embodies its potential.
鈥淲e are looking at the whole child, the whole student,鈥 Galusha says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e looking at the home, the grades, the transportation and resources issues. And we start early, so by the time they reach high school, a comprehensive support network is in place. I don鈥檛 know another program where this kind of work is happening.鈥