2015 "No School Alone" Report.
In 2014, legislation was enacted to direct the Education Research and Data Center (ERDC) to contract with the Washington State University (WSU) extension to conduct a geographic analysis to identify areas where family factors such as employment and health status correlated with academic and behavioral indicators of student success. The report, entitled "No School Alone: How Community Risks and Assets Contribute to School and Youth Success," was published in 2015 by the Child and Family Research Unit, then the Area Health Education Center.
The report uses as its unit of analysis "locales," which are school districts or groups of school districts. The report addresses:
The report included eight recommendations, for example:
Social-Emotional Learning.
Social-emotional learning helps students build awareness and skills in managing emotions, setting goals, establishing relationships, and making responsible decisions that support success in school and life.
In 2019, legislation was enacted that directed the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) to adopt SEL benchmarks and standards and created the Social Emotional Learning Committee (SEL Committee). The SEL Committee was directed to develop a trauma-informed, culturally sustaining and developmentally appropriate statewide SEL framework, and to identify best practices for schools implementing the SEL framework. Students in kindergarten through grade 3 must receive instruction in SEL.
COVID-19 Pandemic.
In 2020, the Governor prohibited most schools from conducting in-person educational, recreational, and other K-12 school programs due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In March 2021, the Governor issued an emergency proclamation noting that Washington children and youth are experiencing a mental and behavioral health crisis as a result of the pandemic, exacerbated by isolation and difficulty engaging with remote learning.
Education Research and Data Center
The ERDC is in the Office of Financial Management. It conducts collaborative analyses of early learning, K-12, and higher education programs and education issues. Among other duties, it coordinates with other state education agencies to compile and analyze education data.
Child and Family Research Unit.
The Child and Family Research Unit is a part of the WSU extension, and works to address the public health challenge of ACEs and resulting trauma by creating, promoting, and sustaining trauma-informed models of practice.
The Education Research and Data Center must contract with the Child and Family Research Unit to produce two reports for the Legislature. The first report must be completed by December 1, 2022, and must analyze educational programs, services, and related academic and nonacademic supports provided by public schools and community-based organizations in partnership with schools, using data collected from those public schools and community-based organizations. The report must:
The second report must be completed by December 1, 2023. It must update the analysis conducted for the 2015 report, including the geographic analysis and, where possible, highlight the same locales highlighted in the earlier report. It must also disaggregate student data by several dimensions including race, low-income status, and special education status.
The substitute bill requires the Education Research and Data Center and the Child and Family Research Unit to include community-based organizations in addition to public schools when collecting data and analyzing educational programs, services, and related academic and nonacademic supports.
(In support) These reports will give hard data on what is happening across the state to identify where educational policies and supports around adverse childhood experiences, mental health, and social-emotional learning (SEL) are working well, and where they are not working well. It will also identify critical student needs and give recommendations on how to use the data in the reports.
Community-based organizations provide important services in school buildings. During the pandemic, community-based organizations provided childcare, virtual academic and SEL programming, meal and homework support, and technological support. However, collecting data about school partnerships with community-based organizations may be challenging.
(Opposed) None.