America’s achievement gap

water This morning I opened The Washington Post to an editorial entitled “The Summer Gap: Poor children should not return to school already behind.” Let me share the first paragraph with you:

A new school year is beginning, and students are returning to classrooms with stories of how they spent the summer. Many will talk of taking trips to historic places, having fun at summer camps or learning new skills. But an idyllic summer is a myth, not the norm, for most low-income children. For them, the end of school is the end of opportunity and a loss of academic skills that leads to them entering September already behind their better-off peers. Efforts to close America’s achievement gap would be helped if more attention and resources were directed to these crucial summer months.

I want to thank you for your support, which has helped us touch the lives of nearly 200 children and teens — many living at the poverty level. Instead of being unsupervised or on the streets, they had a safe place to come to, three decent meals every day, summer fun, field trips, and a variety of enrichment opportunities. Besides giving kids a chance to be kids, our day camps helped stop what educators call “summer learning loss.” We see real evidence that our kids, instead of sliding farther back, will be better prepared to go back to school — in terms of better social skills, increased intellectual curiosity and background knowledge, as well as having done reading and math during the summer.

It is a huge challenge to put together the programs and staffing every summer that these kids need — and we couldn’t do it without you — the individual donors, the churches, the Urban Hands mission groups who share the dream of every child becoming all that God created them to be.

Every day we see bright-eyed, beautiful five-year-olds bouncing in the door — as well as fifteen-year-olds where sometimes it feels like our opportunity to help shape their lives is slipping away. We thank you for caring, for helping and loving these kids. Pray for us as we head into fall. We’re providing backpacks, school supplies, even shoes as kids go back to school. We’re starting a new after-school program in another public housing complex and have been vetted by the DC Public Schools to assist onsite with after-school programs at two high-need elementary schools.

The needs and opportunities are greater than ever, and we need and thank you for your support.

God’s peace,
lynn
Lynn Bergfalk
Executive Director

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