Education
The Latino community consistently rates the education of its children as a top priority. Latino students have made progress over the past decade, but gaps along the educational pipeline still exist. In order to maximize impact, the National Council of La Raza (NCLR) focuses its investment in the areas of early childhood education and high school reform, where the disparity between Latinos and other groups is greatest. NCLR addresses the issue of education through a complementary, two-part approach that includes direct services to community-based organizations as well as advocacy for policy outcomes that will make the nation’s public school system more responsive to the needs of Latino children.
NCLR's programmatic division, housed under its Education Programs Component, provides capacity-building assistance including curriculum, program, and professional development to support and strengthen education programming at the community-based level. The Education Programs Component's capacity-building training and technical assistance model addresses disparities in Hispanic educational achievement by strengthening services and programs operated by more than 100 NCLR Affiliates.
NCLR’s education policy work, housed in the Office of Research, Advocacy, and Legislation, strives to ensure that Latino students, including immigrant and English language learners, enter school ready to learn and graduate from high school with a meaningful diploma at the same rate as their peers. NCLR’s advocacy in early childhood education and high school reform, which is focused principally at the federal level, includes policies and programs such as Head Start, the No Child Left Behind Act, the DREAM Act, and funding for key federal education programs.
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Related Programs
- Education Programs
NCLR’s education program services and activities are targeted to the approximately 150 affiliated organizations that provide educational services to the Latino community while NCLR’s education policy work addresses national issues in public education. The organizations Affiliates provide services along each critical stage of the educational “pipeline” – infants and toddlers, school-age students, and adults and parents. NCLR’s program work places a special focus on organizations and programs that serve preschool and high school.
- KIDS COUNT - Puerto Rico
- The KIDS COUNT Puerto Rico project is an effort to address the information gap in order to improve the health, safety, education, economic security, and development of Puerto Rico's children. By providing policy-makers and citizens with benchmarks of child well-being, KIDS COUNT Puerto Rico seeks to enrich local and national discussions of ways to secure better futures for all our children.
- NCLR AmeriCorps
- AmeriCorps strengthens communities through projects that address education, public safety, the environment, and other unmet human needs. NCLR AmeriCorps members serve at local nonprofits, public agencies, and faith-based organizations, helping to build a culture of citizenship, service, and responsibility. Through their service, members gain valuable job skills and experience and earn an education award to pursue a college education or pay back student loans.
- Secondary Education (SE) Programs
The secondary Education Programs are committed to improving highschools around the country so all students, especially some of those most at risk, are prepared for success in college and work. Targeting the unique needs of Latino and English Language Learner (ELL) students, the Secondary Education Programs work through a network of community-based charter schools and Early College High Schools.
- Early Care and Education (ECE) Program
The ECE Team’s purpose is to establish NCLR as the national leader for increasing school readiness of Latino children and improving their potential for life success by ensuring the availability of high-quality developmentally, linguistically, and culturally appropriate services for Latino children from birth to eight years old.
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Related Policies
Federal Policies
- American Recovery and Reinvestment Act
- Resources about the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) for individuals, NCLR Affiliates, community-based organizations, and advocates.
- Early Care and Education Policy
- Latino children are the fastest-growing segment of the child population, yet they have the least access to the early care and education (ECE) that will help assure their future academic success. Because of the limited access to high-quality ECE programs, Latino children start kindergarten well behind their peers, a gap that continues over the entirety of the education continuum. These trends will continue unless Hispanic children have greater access to ECE programs that address their unique needs and prepare them to be successful in school.
- Investing in Education
- Despite the rapid growth in the Latino student population, education programs known to boost Hispanic student achievement have not received comparable funding increases.
- The Latino High School Reform Project
- Latino high school students continue to graduate at a rate much lower than their non-Hispanic peers. NCLR's Latino High School Project seeks to develop and support policies that result in increased graduation rates among Latinos, preparing them to be successful, productive citizens.
- Children and Immigration Enforcement
- NCLR is concerned that the U.S. lacks a comprehensive strategy for protecting children directly affected by immigration enforcement activities. We advocate for the adoption of new immigration enforcement policies that consider the impact of immigration activities on families and children.
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Contact
National Council of La Raza
Raul Yzaguirre Building
1126 16th Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20036
Tel. 202-785-1670
NCLR Quick Facts
Established: 1968
Regional Offices: 8
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