Are online schools a better
option for teen moms – or just a high-tech version of schools that once hid
pregnant girls from shame?
smf: Prevention is the first and
most important tool in the teen pregnancy toolbox. This story needs to be appreciated
in light of the fact that LAUSD is currently developing its budget for next
year – and is proposing to invest a whopping 10¢ per student to support
Health Education.
|
BY
ERIN EINHORN | THE
NATION | http://bit.ly/1cAvmaC
DETROIT—For the
first seven months of its existence, the Pathways Academy on this city’s east
side had some noisy classrooms—really noisy.
Students in an
English room on a recent morning were laughing and chatting so loudly—“And you
was all wrong!” one exclaimed as her friend burst out briefly into song—that it
was almost too loud to hear the babies.
Yes, the
babies—a 10-month-old babbling on his mother’s lap as she plugged away at her
computer, and a bigger boy, Dominic, nearly two, careening around the classroom
as he pushed a wheeled chair.
Dominic squealed
with delight until smashing the chair into a desk and falling back against the
floor.
“Waaaaaah!” he
shrieked as his mom, Alaca Ponds, 18, ran to pick him up.
“He’s OK,” Ponds
said, cuddling him against her shoulder.
It was not an
ideal environment for learning, acknowledged principal Nate King, but Pathways is filling a crucial role for
Detroit’s pregnant and parenting teens. This new charter, which opened in a
shopping center here in September, is the only school dedicated to young
parents in a city that has one
of the highest rates of teen pregnancy in the country.
So even though
the school’s daycare provider couldn’t get licensed in time for the first day
of school—leaving some students’ children to play in classrooms and others to
watch videos with babysitters—Pathways had to open on time, King said, or many
of these students would have had nowhere else to go.
At a time when
school options for teen parents are drying up across the country, schools like
Pathways could—for better or worse—represent the future of education for young
parents.
At Pathways
classes are taught almost entirely online—not by teachers. This means students
don’t write research papers or do science labs or engage in classroom debates
that could prepare them well for college. But the learn-at-your-own-pace
courses seem ideally suited to students who may need time off for maternity
leave or to care for a sick child, or who may need to restart their educations
months or years after dropping out.
Students can stay
enrolled even if they can’t make it to class every day, and the lower academic
costs in a school with fewer teachers can free up funds for badly needed
support services, like counseling and transportation.
“What we do is
remove the barriers that were preventing these kids from coming to school,”
King said. “We’re getting kids that were lost back into the system.”
The students at
Pathways say they’re determined to succeed—not in spite of their parenting
obligations, but because of them.
“When I found out
I was pregnant, I just knew I wanted the best for my child because I didn’t
have the best,” Ponds said, adding that she wants to go to college—maybe become
an engineer—to set an example for her son.
“I want to get
my high school diploma so my baby won’t be like, ‘Whoa, you didn’t get yours?
Why I gotta get mine, mama?’ ”
While that kind
of resolve is common among young moms, programs that once helped teen parents
stay in school have been gutted—in part because teen pregnancy rates have
dropped to historic
lows. Some states and districts that once had robust support programs
for teen parents now have no dedicated funding for these vulnerable kids.
But teens are
still getting pregnant. Nearly 300,000 girls
between the ages of 15 and 19 give birth every year in the United States—almost
three percent of girls in that age group—and a third of them won’t earn a
diploma or a GED by age 22. Less than two percent will earn a college degree by
age 30. Their babies are more likely to do poorly in school, to have health
problems, to suffer from child abuse, to end up in jail or unemployed and to
become teen parents themselves, continuing a cycle of poverty and trauma that
can last for generations.
To break that
cycle, these young parents need intensive attention. They need therapy. Many of
the students at Pathways have survived traumatic childhoods or abuse, school
staffers say. They need social workers. Some are homeless or live “from pillar
to post,” King said. And, except for the lucky few who have a family member
willing and able to babysit, they need someone to look after their child while
they go to school.
But services
like those are hard to find in struggling cities like Detroit. Here, almost one
in five babies are born to girls aged 19 or younger—nearly 2,000
babies a year—yet no comprehensive high schools currently offer on-site
childcare.
So
computer-based charter schools like Pathways are cropping up around the country
to offer an option, albeit a less than perfect one. Schools have opened in Salt Lake City, Daytona Beach, Florida, and other
communities. And here in Detroit, Pathways and a second online academy that’s
geared toward homeless and older students are the only schools that currently
offer in-school childcare.
Some advocates
for teen parents warn that steering young parents to online classes is just a
high tech version of the last century’s pregnancy schools, where girls “in
trouble” were banished to hide from their shame.
Those schools
“were not equal,” said Patricia Paluzzi, CEO of the Healthy Teen Networks,
which advocates for teen parents. “They didn’t have AP courses or honor societies
or things like that.” But Paluzzi says she has an open mind about the new
online schools as long as they’re in brick-and-mortar classrooms like Pathways,
where students’ work is overseen by teachers, and aren’t “virtual schools,”
where students work from home.
“Is it equitable
in terms of academic rigor? Probably not,” Paluzzi said. “But we want these
kids to graduate from high school with a diploma and we want them to get
prenatal care. We want their kids to get good childcare and we want them to learn
to be effective parents, so I’m happy to see that at least there’s an
alternative that’s been put into place. And if it’s affordable for the school
system, perhaps it’s more sustainable over time than the previous system was.”
Until last year,
Detroit had one of the nation’s most celebrated schools for teen moms.
The Catherine
Ferguson Academy on the city’s west side had been profiled by Oprah’s O
Magazine and by MSNBC
for its 90 percent graduation rate—far higher than typical rates for teen
moms—and for the small farm that students and teachers built on what used to be
a playground.
The school
required all its graduates to enroll in college, and taught them to care for
horses, goats, crops, their children and themselves.
But with an
aging building and expensive programs, the school was dropped, in 2011, by a
district in financial peril. It was briefly rescued by a charter school
operator, but sputtered and finally closed last year.
The Lawrence
Paquin Middle/High School in Baltimore met a similar fate in 2009.
After supporting
teen parents for half a century, it as merged with a school for older students
to save money, then closed for good in 2012.
“It’s really
shameful,” said Rosetta Stith, Paquin’s former principal. “We took a look at
every girl who came in here to see where she was and what we needed to do for
her … We told them: You’re going to prove to the world that you are following
your dreams.”
The closed
schools are among scores of programs that have shut down around the country.
Some were little more than GED mills, but others were treasures offering
on-site childcare, health clinics, parenting classes and a range of social
services on top of a college prep curriculum.
Some cities are
making efforts to replace the services, including Baltimore, which next year
plans to add a daycare and teen-parent resource center to an alternative
program for students who’ve fallen behind. A school in Detroit has a program in
the works, too. But critics say too many districts have replaced these schools
with little or nothing.
“The vast
majority are not doing anything, or are even potentially doing harm,” said Lara
Kaufmann, the director of education policy for at-risk students at the National
Women’s Law Center. “In most places, there’s no support being provided by the
schools and in many cases they’re being pushed out in ways that violate the
law.”
When the
National Women’s Law Center surveyed
state laws and policies in 2012, it found that just 26 states offered
services to support pregnant teens and 32 states had no laws expressly prohibiting
discrimination against pregnant women or girls.
As a result, in
many schools pregnant and parenting teens are often bullied by teachers who
won’t excuse child-related absences or make accommodations. Pregnant girls have
been barred from school activities, pressured to enroll in alternative schools
and shunned by their peers.
Extreme examples
include a Louisiana
charter school that until 2012 had a policy of expelling girls who tested
positive on mandatory pregnancy tests, and a New Mexico school that forced
a girl to announce her pregnancy during a school assembly.
But beyond the
headlines are young moms like Nicole Adams, who says she was barred from her
local high school in Detroit because she was pregnant. Adams had dropped out of
high school at 17, but tried to re-enroll a year later when she was about to
become a mom.
Administrators
saw her bulging belly, she said, and told her that the school wouldn’t be safe
for her. “They said they didn’t want to be responsible for any harm toward me,”
she recalled.
She didn’t know
that excluding a student because of a pregnancy violates federal law, and she
didn’t manage to return to school until three years—and the birth of a second
child—later.
Now, at 22,
she’s at Covenant House, a school for homeless kids and overage students who
left school but have returned to earn their diplomas. It is the only Detroit
school other than Pathways that offers free onsite childcare to students.
Another Detroit
mom, Bonita, 16, who asked that her last name be withheld, said she dropped out
of a suburban Detroit high school when administrators, learning she was
pregnant, insisted she transfer to an alternative program.
Since her grades
were good—mostly As and Bs, she said—she had no interest in what she considered
a bad-kid school.
“I didn’t see
anything that would help me going to that school,” she said. “Everybody stands
outside and smokes cigarettes.”
Now she’s at
Pathways, but says she misses traditional classrooms.
“It’s chaotic,”
she said of Pathways. “Since it’s on the computer, nobody really focuses
because there’s no teacher talking, so people just get up and leave or talk to
somebody next to them.”
Advocates know
what young parents need to succeed in school: childcare, counseling, parenting
skills. They need access to contraceptives to avoid a second pregnancy, and
attention from social workers who can secure housing, food stamps, bus vouchers
and other assistance.
“What works is
very comprehensive case-management services, where there’s actually a social
worker who is working with a young woman to find out what she needs,” said
Claire Brindis, a professor of pediatrics and health policy at the University
of California, San Francisco. “Is she living at home? Is she participating in
school on a regular basis, and if she’s not coming to school, are there
transportation problems?”
Some advocates
want to see those services offered through so-called “wraparound” programs in
traditional high schools, while others prefer standalone programs, like those
that were shut down in Detroit and Baltimore.
New York City,
which closed its academically inferior “P-Schools”
in 2007, now offers a range of support services to 800 families through childcare
and resource centers at 35 high schools around the city. The $12-million program is the city’s largest
source of free childcare.
In Denver, those
services are provided at Florence Crittenton High School, which was the subject
of a 2012 reality show called High School Moms. The school, which began as a
home for pregnant girls and morphed into a school in 1983, is a partnership
between Denver Public Schools, which handles the academics, and the nonprofit
Florence Crittenton Services, which raises $2 million a year to provide
therapy, healthcare and quality care for the children of roughly 130 students.
“Flocrit” boasts
an 80 percent graduation rate, but it’s not the only model that works, said
Crittenton Services President Suzanne Banning.
“It’s important
for us to look at young moms and come up with different ways to handle it,” she
said. “Teen moms are not failures. They’re gems. They’re amazing, motivated
people if given the opportunity.”
It’s too soon to
say whether online schools will be a good choice for teen moms, since schools
like Pathways are too new to have much of a track record.
Online schools
typically have lower academic costs since they can operate in smaller buildings
with fewer teachers, said Michael Barbour, an education professor at Sacred
Heart University in Fairfield, Connecticut, who has tracked the growth of these
schools.
Since online
schools often get allocated the same funds per student as traditional schools,
critics charge that they’re moneymakers for the private companies that often
run them. (Pathways is run by the New Jersey-based Innovative Educational Programs). But
supporters say the lower price tag means there’s money left over to provide services
like transportation.
While Catherine
Ferguson students in recent years had to travel to school with their babies on
city buses—pushing strollers through snow in the winter—Pathways students are
picked up at their homes for a ride to class.
And once in
school, they can access parenting classes, a mentoring program and social
services that are provided on campus. In April, Pathway’s child care center,
which is run by a nonprofit agency, finally got its license and opened
classrooms for babies, toddlers and preschoolers. A school social worker says
she’s working with a local hospital to bring mobile clinics to the school so
students and their children can get healthcare on site.
Pathways
students don’t necessarily come to class every day. Of 140 students registered,
King said 30 work from home on school-issued laptops, for reasons including
maternity leave. Of those expected to be in class, King says he usually has
about 50 to 70 in school on a typical day.
While King says
he’s working to improve attendance, he notes that these students would have
much more difficulty in a traditional school where missing class means falling
behind.
The online model
lets students learn at their own pace, reading online textbooks, taking notes,
then using those notes to prove their knowledge through online quizzes. If they
miss a few days of class, they can pick up their individualized coursework
where they left off.
By next year,
King said he hopes to give students a mix of computer courses and teacher-led
traditional classes—a “blended learning” approach that he says will meet more
students’ needs.
But, for now, he
said, he’s focused on getting as many of these hard-to-reach students through
his doors as he can. He spends his evenings and weekends visiting the homes of
students who’ve gone AWOL or those considering enrollment – typically visiting
seven homes a week, he says – so he can help remove logistical or emotional
hurdles that are keeping students from class.
“They’re easily
overwhelmed,” he said. “I can’t imagine being 16 with a child or pregnant, not
having anywhere to go, in some cases, or the resources to go forward another
day. Part of our job is not only removing those physical barriers but also
removing the mental barriers.”
If Pathways
didn’t exist, he said, these young moms would be stuck at home alone with their
babies.
“We’re giving
them a chance to get a high school education,” he said. “We offer them support.
We offer them access to society.”
Katelynn Young
was a 16-year-old junior at Detroit’s Denby High School when what she thought
was a stomach virus led to a pregnancy test in the school’s infirmary.
She panicked
when she saw the fateful double lines.
“I started
crying,” she said. “I didn’t know what to do.”
Then she took
charge. When her mom wasn’t supportive, she took herself to the doctor. When
her daughter, Dallas, was born in June, 2014, she made sure the little girl had
health insurance and clothes. And when she considered her own future, she knew
she’d have to find a way to finish high school.
“Before I had a
baby, I was not motivated. I winged my life. Now I plan, I think ahead,” Young
said.
She attends
Pathways, and finds the online model a great fit. “It teaches you discipline
and it teaches you everything you really need to know,” she said.
In contrast to
her previous classrooms, where kids were disrespectful and teachers
disinterested, the online model forces students to focus, she said. “Here you
can’t go on unless you actually pass your class,” she said. “You actually have
to look at the lesson.”
Teachers are
available if students need help understanding the material, but some students
say it’s more difficult to learn without teacher-led lessons.
“I do miss
having a teacher, especially in algebra and geometry,” said Vernisha Wade, 18,
a Pathways student who is expecting a baby boy in June. “I’m more of a visual
learner. I learn better if someone is writing on the board.”
Others students
complain that it’s too easy to cram for the online quizzes, then forget what
they’ve learned.
Until the school
recently blocked Google on its computers, some students would use search
engines to find answers to quizzes, rather than refer to their notes, several
students said.
But many
students interviewed at Pathways and Covenant House said they appreciated the
flexibility to work at their own pace.
“It’s more
convenient,” said Raylene Johnson, 18, who has a three-year-old and attends
Covenant House. “If I miss a day of school, and if I have access to a computer,
I’m able to do my work that I missed that morning instead of having to wait for
the next day.”
But whether or
not they like the online model, most Pathways students said they’re glad to
have a school where they can be with students facing similar issues.
“Without this
school, I would have dropped out,” Young said. “It’s meant a lot to me. It’s
made me feel like I could achieve anything in life.”
Ponds, the young
mother whose son Dominic loves pushing chairs in classrooms, said at Pathways,
a school full of parents look after each other.
“Here, if your
baby falls, they’ll be ready to pick your baby up better than you is,” Ponds
said. “It’s a helpful environment.”
Barbour, the
virtual schools expert from Sacred Heart University, said that online schools
don’t have the best track record for preparing students for college, but if
done right, they can make a difference—especially for students coping with the
special demands of parenting.
“If they’re
bringing students together so they can inspire each other and motivate each
other, maybe it has a chance,” Barbour said. “If not, then basically they’re
setting these girls up for educational failure … not giving them the skills
that would allow them to do much with their life beyond pass a statewide
assessment.”
This story was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education.
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