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Children's Institute says many Oregon children at risk of poor emotional, social health in life's first years |
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Original Source | The Oregonian By Bill Graves, Wednesday April 7, 2010
Teacher Heather Mains holds a child in the infant and toddler room at Gracie’s Place, a relief nursery in Salem for children whose families are in crisis. Teachers also make home visits to help parents with their skills. The relief nursery puts an emphasis on emotional development: trust, stability and security, qualities that help form the base for learning in young children.
Stephanie Yao / The Oregonian
Oregon offers promising programs to support the social and emotional health of infants and toddlers in the critical first years of life, but those efforts reach only a fraction of the kids who need them, a child advocacy group reported today. By not investing more in "upstream" prevention programs for infants and toddlers, "Oregon will continue to flood its downstream mental health treatment programs, its alcohol and drug addiction services, and its criminal justice system," writes the Children's Institute of Portland in its report, "From Risk to Resilience: Building the Social and Emotional Health of Oregon's Most Vulnerable Young Children."
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Oregon Legislature finds $1 million for Early Head Start |
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Original Source | The Oregonian By Bill Graves, Wednesday April 7, 2010
Tyshun Brewer, Early Head Start teacher (with back to camera) leads a lesson at Albina Head Start in NE Portland last summer. Brent Wojahn / The Oregonian
In a move that has escaped much public attention, the Oregon Legislature in its February special session came up with $1 million for the state's first spending on Early Head Start, a program to help prepare disadvantaged children under age 3 for school.
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Original Source | The New York Times By Nicholas D. Kristof, Thursday March 25, 2010
Before I ask for a drumroll and reveal "the secrets" of fighting poverty, a bit of background:
For a quarter-century after World War II, the United States made great progress against poverty. Then in the 1970s, we fumbled. Over the last 35 years, our economy has almost tripled in size, but, according to the United States Census Bureau, the number of Americans living below the poverty line has been stuck at roughly 1 in 8.
One reason is that wages for blue-collar and other ordinary workers peaked in the early 1970s, after adjusting for inflation, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. A second is the breakdown in the family and the explosion in single-parent households. A third is the quintupling of incarceration rates beginning in 1970, making it harder for impoverished young men to play a role in families or get decent jobs.
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Prisons don't use reading scores to predict future inmate populations |
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Original Source | The Oregonian By Bill Graves, Tuesday March 23, 2010
Ross William Hamilton/The Oregonian
The D Block at Oregon State Penitentiary in Salem is part of a growing state prison system. But the future needs of the prisons in Oregon and elsewhere are not determined by looking at third-grade reading test scores as some education leaders across the nation continue to assert, prison officials say.
The statement gets tossed out at conferences, pops up in blogs and surfaces in newspaper editorials. It is always a variation of this: "Some states use their third-grade reading scores to plan for future prison beds." A prominent early education researcher at Yale University told me five years ago that California uses third-grade reading scores to plan for its prison space. A story in Education Week ten years ago said Indiana does the same, except using second-grade reading test results. A quick search on the Internet reveals similar statements from a principal in residence at the U.S. Department of Education, an officer in the International Reading Association and by several op-ed columnists.
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Beaverton police chief weighs in on preparing children for service |
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Original Source | The Oregonian By Geoff Spalding, Tuesday March 23, 2010
Your article "A new mission for the military: Fight the flab" (March 18) was a real eye-opener, especially the fact that less than 30 percent of 17- to 24-year-olds currently qualify for the Army. The article noted that besides being overweight or obese, many young people are not able to serve their country because they have not finished high school. I am aware of still another major disqualifying factor for military service among young people: having a criminal record. All of these factors speak volumes about the need for all of us to do more to help our children grow up to become fit, well-educated and law-abiding members of society. Investing in early childhood education contributes to the development of individuals who are well-adjusted and better educated. As a longtime supporter of early education, I know research shows that children who participate in quality early care and education programs are more likely to finish school and become responsible adults and less likely to engage in criminal behavior. That's good for our military and helps make our communities safe. -- Geoff Spalding is chief of the Beaverton Police Department |
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