The College's Center for Community Involvement plays a key leadership role in the county-wide response to the Department of Education's America Reads Challenge. What makes this such a unique partnership that fosters civic responsibility and civic literacy is the following:
The partnership involves the Miami-Dade County Public Schools, the University of Miami, Barry University, Florida Memorial University, Florida International University, and Miami-Dade Community College. This partnership of K-12 public schools along with private and public higher education institutions is unique in the country. Under the leadership of M-DCC these institutions jointly provide nearly 175 federal work-study students to serve as one-on-one tutors at 34 elementary schools and six after-school programs. Together, the tutors provide individual assistance to nearly 2,000 first-grade students every week, and this requires significant energy and resources to assure that FWS students receive appropriate training and support. Also, the coordination of the placement of these student-tutors is a positive example of dedication to collaborative use of institutional resources to maximize the benefits for the community.
The partnership also includes a comprehensive training program for the tutors that addresses the development of essential tutoring skills as well as specific sessions to emphasize civic responsibility and the importance of individual commitment to community good. These training and support activities occur on a continuous basis throughout the semester.
An additional feature of the partnership is a separate series of training events for teachers, teachers' aides, and others who desire to help children learn to read better. This is a jointly developed training program called "Buddy Reading" and it provides basic skills for individual volunteers. It also serves as a means to involve volunteers from the community at large as well as from within each of the partner institutions.
Finally, this partnership provides a way for us to introduce our students to the importance of corporate citizenship responsibilities. In other words, we model for them how the different sectors of a community must work together for the strength of the community; that through the combined efforts of our different colleges, we can do far more than any one individual school in assisting our community. We believe that it is essential for our students to understand that higher education has a common commitment to enhance the learning of children in the K-12 system.
Joshua Young, College-Wide Director, Center for Community Involvement, [email protected]