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A P U B L I C AT I O N O F T H E C O M M U N I T Y D E V E L O P M E N T D E PA R T M E N T O F T H E F E D E R A L R E S E R V E B A N K O F S A N F R A N C I S C O

VOLUME NINETEEN NUMBER 2

Back to School
Prioritizing Education in Community Development Efforts

The Power of Preschool
Early Investment Yields Solid Returns

The Economics of Early Childhood
Development as Seen by Two Fed Economists

www.frbsf.org/community

FALL 2007

Linking Community Development
and School Improvement
An Interview with Professor Mark Warren

The Community Development
and Education Connection

CI Notebook
This publication is produced by the Community
Development Department of the Federal Reserve
Bank of San Francisco. The magazine serves as
a forum to discuss issues relevant to community development in the Federal Reserve’s 12th
District, and to highlight innovative programs and
ideas that have the potential to improve the communities in which we work.
Community Development Department
Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
101 Market Street, Mail Stop 640
San Francisco, CA 94105
www.frbsf.org
(415) 974-2765 / fax: (415)393-1920
Joy Hoffmann
Group Vice President
Public Information and Community Development
joy.k.hoffmann@sf.frb.org
Scott Turner
Director, Community Development
scott.turner@sf.frb.org
Lauren Mercado-Briosos
Administrative Analyst
lauren.mercado-briosos@sf.frb.org
RESEARCH STAFF
David Erickson
Manager, Center for Community
Development Investments
david.erickson@sf.frb.org
Carolina Reid
Manager, Research Group
carolina.reid@sf.frb.org
Naomi Cytron
Research Associate
naomi.cytron@sf.frb.org
Vivian Pacheco
Research Associate
vivian.pacheco@sf.frb.org
FIELD STAFF
John Olson
District Manager
john.olson@sf.frb.org

by Carolina Reid
Manager, Research Group

A

s the mother of a 4-year old, it’s easy for me to get passionate about the
quality of education in the United States. Most of the parental chatter at the
playground revolves around finding childcare, deciding whether to go public
or private, and wondering if our kids will have teachers who inspire them to
new levels of curiosity and insight. But it wasn’t until we started a research project on
the effects of concentrated poverty that it hit home how central schools are to our work
in community development. In poor communities across the country, students are not
getting the opportunity to learn the skills they need to succeed in today’s labor market,
often perpetuating the intergenerational and neighborhood poverty we are trying to
address in our work.
In this issue of Community Investments, we’ve brought together articles from scholars
and practitioners who are no less passionate about ensuring that all kids have access to
high quality education. The issue devotes considerable space to the topic of early childhood education. Research has shown that programs to support early childhood development, such as publicly-funded preschool for low-income children, generate important
life-long benefits and are well worth their up-front costs. We’re especially honored to
highlight the work of Arthur Rolnick and Rob Grunewald from the Federal Reserve Bank
of Minneapolis.
We also devote a separate section to the links between schools and community development and explore how those of us in community development can think about schools as
important partners in our work. We interview Professor Mark Warren of Harvard University, who has studied how neighborhood schools can help to build strong communities.
Professor Deborah McKoy describes an innovative program at UC Berkeley that turns
youth and education into an integral part of urban planning efforts. If you want to be
inspired, read Principal Deb Drysdale-Elias’s essay on the changes that have happened
in Yuma, Arizona. And take a look at the new County Bank branch in Fresno—it’s in a
high school!
We see this issue as a first step towards understanding how to build stronger links
between community development efforts and educational reform. Let us know if you have
examples of innovative efforts in your community—we’d love to share them.

Jan Bontrager
Regional Manager
Arizona, Nevada, Utah
jan.bontrager@sf.frb.org
Melody Winter Nava
Regional Manager
Southern California
melody.nava@sf.frb.org
Craig Nolte
Regional Manager
Alaska, Hawaii, Idaho, Oregon, Washington
craig.nolte@sf.frb.org
Lena Robinson
Regional Manager
Northern California
lena.robinson@sf.frb.org

								

Carolina Reid

Inside this Issue
Back to School:
Prioritizing Education in Community Development Efforts.....................................3
The Power of Preschool:
Early Investment Yields Solid Returns....................................................................7

GRAPHIC DESIGN

The Economics of Early Childhood
Development as Seen by Two Fed Economists.....................................................13

Steve Baxter
Communicating Arts
steve.baxter@sf.frb.org

Linking Community Development and School Improvement:
An Interview with Professor Mark Warren............................................................16
The Community Development and Education Connection....................................20

Overview

Back to School

Prioritizing Education in Community Development Efforts
“In these days, it is doubtful that any child may reasonably be expected
to succeed in life if he is denied the opportunity of an education.”
Chief Justice Earl Warren, Brown v. Board of Education, 1954 1
By Carolina Reid

Introduction

M

ore than 50 years after Chief Justice Earl Warren
penned the words above, the link between education and opportunity is as profound as ever.
Indeed, as many sectors of the economy have
undergone restructuring and technological advancement,
the value of a high quality education—particularly a college
degree—has become increasingly important in determining
an individual’s economic prospects.2 As Figure 1 shows,
over the past few decades, the wage gap between college
graduates and those with a high school education or less has
widened dramatically. Today, workers with a college degree
will earn nearly twice as much over their lifetimes as those
with a high school degree; workers with professional degrees
will earn almost four times as much.3
Yet many children—particularly those living in low-income
and minority households and communities—fail to graduate
from high school, let alone earn a college degree. The inequalities in access to a high quality education and achievement
Figure 1:

are evident at every step in a child’s life. Children living in
low-income households are less likely to be enrolled in preschool, thereby missing out on developing important cognitive and social skills that influence future academic success.4
By grade four, more than half of low-income children score
below a basic level in reading, and one in three score below
basic in math, a much lower percentage than their wealthier
peers.5 (See Figure 2) By high school, students from lowincome families drop out of high school at six times the rate
of those from wealthy families.6 And African Americans and
Latinos are significantly less likely than whites to enter college and earn a college degree.
Teasing out the underlying causes for these disparities is
a challenge in its own right, let alone trying to develop the
appropriate policy responses. But viewed through the lens
of housing and community development, it is obvious that
there is a strong link between poverty and educational attainment, a link that affects not only children and their families

Real Hourly Wages by Education, 1973-2005 (2005 dollars)

$40

Advanced Degree

$30
College Degree

$20
Some College
High School Degree

$10

Less than High School

$0
1973

1976

1979

1982

1985

1988

1991

1994

1997

2000

2003

Source: Economic Policy Institute
Source: Economic Policy Institute

Fall 2007

3

Overview
Figure 2:

Differences in the Percent of 4th Grade Students Scoring
at a Basic Level or Above in Reading and in Math

100

80

90

89

90
77

75

67

70
60

Percent

67

60

50
41

44

46

40
30
20
10
0
Reading
Reading					
Black
WhiteWhite Black

Hispanic
Hispanic

Mathematics
Mathematics

Eligible
for Free
or ReducedLunch
Lunch
Eligible
for Free
or Reduced

Not Eligible
Not Eligible

Source: National Center for Education Statistics, Mathematics and Reading Report Card 2005

Source: National Center for Education Statistics, Mathematics and Reading Report Ca

but communities as well. Which leads us to the question
that lies at the heart of this issue of Community Investments:
how can those of us traditionally focused on community development contribute to improving access to a high quality
education for low-income and minority children, and in the
process help to catalyze equitable and sustainable neighborhood revitalization?
In this article, we begin to explore this question by first
reviewing the academic literature that examines the links between poverty, neighborhoods, and academic achievement.
We then turn to a brief look at the achievement and funding gaps that affect the quality of education in low-income
communities. The article concludes by highlighting how the
community development field can help to close the achievement gap, from supporting investments in early childhood
education to developing programs that increase the financial
literacy of our nation’s youth.
Links among Poverty, Neighborhoods, and
Academic Achievement
In 2005, nearly 13 million (17.6 percent) people under
the age of 18 in the United States were living in poverty.7
A wide body of research demonstrates that the consequences of growing up poor are far reaching, affecting access to
prenatal care, birth weight, and immunizations; behavioral
problems; juvenile delinquency, drug and alcohol use, and
teenage pregnancy, to name just a few.8 These pathways
often overlap, ultimately impairing the cognitive development and lowering the educational outcomes of children.9
One area of remarkable agreement within the research

4

community is that poverty’s main impact occurs during the
pre- and early school years.10 Independent research in economics, developmental psychology, and neurobiology has
shown that it is in these early years that children build the
cognitive, linguistic, social and emotional capacity that lays
the foundation for later academic and economic success.11 It
is during this time that children are most vulnerable to the
consequences of living in poverty and its long-term effects.
Recent research has also focused on the importance of
neighborhood poverty in determining student’s educational
outcomes, although with less consensus on its effects than
in the area of early childhood development. Nevertheless,
most studies tend to show higher school dropout rates,
lower grades, and lower levels of college attendance among
youth living in low-income communities than among youth
in wealthier neighborhoods.12 Researchers have theorized
how neighborhood poverty affects educational attainment
in a number of ways, from the lack of resources and poorer
quality schools to the effect of peer networks and social
norms that fail to value and promote student engagement
and achievement.13 Frequent moves—prompted by financial
instability and/or the lack of quality affordable housing—can
also have a negative impact on children’s academic achievement, as well as disrupt teaching in the classroom.14
These poverty and neighborhood effects matter because
public schools—particularly in large urban areas—are highly
segregated by both income and race.15 According to one estimate, one in three public schools is “high-poverty,” meaning
that half or more of the student body is eligible for free or
reduced-price lunch. Nearly one in two African American

Fall 2007

Overview
and Latino students in 4th grade attends one of these high
poverty schools, compared with only 5 percent of white
students.16 These patterns of racial and economic segregation in public schools lead to a complicated constellation
of inequalities that affect both school quality and student
academic achievement, with resounding effects for poor
children’s future labor market opportunities.17

all races are already about two years behind other students—a
gap that persists through high school.20 Figure 3 shows the
results of the 2005 NAEP assessment for the states of the
Federal Reserve’s 12th District. Among 12th District states,
California’s poverty gap is the widest, with low-income
students scoring 27.6 points less than their higher income
peers on a combined reading and math scale—equivalent
to about 3 years of learning. Figure 3 also reflects the challenges of educating the large low-income, non-English
speaking population in states like California, Arizona, and
Nevada. In these three states, only about 1 in 3 students
eligible for a free lunch is reading at a basic level or above,
compared with more than half in states like Washington
and Idaho.

Academic Achievement

Providing a snapshot of educational quality and educational attainment is far from easy; not only are there problems with differences in data measurement and definition,
but not everyone necessarily agrees on what measures are
the most meaningful or how assessments should be conducted. With these caveats in mind, however, the National
Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) is a nationally
representative assessment of students’ achievement in areas
such as reading, mathematics, science, geography and economics, and provides a useful measure for understanding
differences in learning outcomes among different population groups and over time.18 While NAEP surveys students
at multiple grade levels, in this article we focus primarily on
the results for grade 4.
The story in the NAEP data is not all bleak. Since the
early 1970s, most measures of academic achievement in
math and reading at the elementary school level (Grade
4) have improved, not only for whites but also for African
American and Latino children.19 Nationally, the gap between
white and African American and white and Latino achievement levels has been closing. Between 1999 and 2005, in
particular, NAEP scores for African Americans and Latinos
improved markedly, reversing the widening of the gap witnessed during the 1990s.
Yet despite this positive trend, overall gaps in achievement among racial groups remain startling high. By the end
of grade 4, African American, Latino and poor students of
Figure 3:

The Funding Gap

These disparities in academic achievement are the result
of a complex set of interwoven factors—from levels of parental education, language barriers and readiness for school to
differences in teacher quality and access to educational resources. But there is no doubt that inadequate funding plays
an important role in perpetuating the achievement gap.21 In
most states in the Federal Reserve’s 12th District, per capita
student expenditures are well below the national average,
and four states—Utah, Idaho, Nevada, and Arizona fall in
the bottom quintile. (See Figure 4)
In addition, there are significant gaps in funding between poor and non-poor schools within states and even
within school districts. Nationwide, the gap in funding
between poor and non-poor schools has been widening in
recent years. A recent study published by the Education
Trust found that in 2004, the gap in funding per student
between the highest and lowest poverty school districts was
$1,307.22 In other words, a classroom of 25 students in a
wealthy school district would have $32,675 more in funding
for the year than a classroom in a poor school district.

Percent of 4th Grade Students Scoring at a Basic Level or Above in Reading and in Math
(Poverty Gap Indicated Below)
Reading

Reading

Mathematics

Mathematics
100
90

80

80

80

70

70

70

60

60

60

Percent

Percent
Percent

100
100
90
90

50

50

40

40

50
40

30

30

30

20

20

20

10

10

10

0

0

CA
CA
31
31

AZ
AZ
31
31

AK
AK
30
30

NV
US
HI
NV
US
HI
27
24
27
27
27
24
Eligible for Free or Reduced Lunch

OR
UT
OR
UT
21
21
21
21
Not eligible

ID
ID
20
20

WA
WA
18
18

0

Eligible for Free or Reduced Lunch

CA
CA
25
25

US
US
23
23

AZ
AZ
22
22

NV
NV
20
20

AK
AK
20
20

HIHI
19
19

WA
WA
19
19

UT
UT
15
15

OR
OR
14
14

ID
ID
14
14

Not Eligible

Poverty Gap refers to the point difference in average scores between students eligible for a free or reduced
lunch and those not eligible. Ten points are often interpreted as the equivalent of one year in school.
Source: National Center for Education Statistics, Mathematics and Reading Report Card 2005

Fall 2007

5

Overview
Figure 4: Total Spending per Student (2003)
(National Rank Indicated Below)
14,000
14,000

12,000
12,000

Dollars

Dollars

10,000
10,000

8,000
8,000

6,000
6,000

4,000
4,000

2,000
2,000

00

UT
51
51

ID
49
49

NV
48
48

AZ
45
45

WA
33
33

OR
OR
29
29

CA
CA
27
27

US
US

HI
21
21

AK
88

NJ
NJ

1
1

Source: National Center for Education Statistics
Source: National Center for Education Statistics

Public school facilities in low-income communities
also receive the fewest dollars per student for building
construction and renovation. In low-income communities—
defined as neighborhoods where the median income in 2000
was less than $35,000—less than $5,000 was spent per pupil
on school construction; in communities with a median
income of over $100,000, the amount spent was more than
double, at $11,500 per student.23 Moreover, the money spent
on schools serving low-income students was more likely to
fund basic repairs, such as new roofs or asbestos removal,
while schools in more affluent districts were more likely to
receive funds for educational enhancements such as science
labs or performing arts centers.24
While additional investments in public K-12 education
may not be the magic bullet in terms of closing the achievement gap, these funding inequalities certainly impair schools
with high numbers of poor students. Educating low-income
children costs more, with additional resources often needed
for language instruction, special and remedial education,
teacher training, and counseling services. Without access
to resources, these schools are even further disadvantaged
in their ability to attract and retain high quality teachers,
reduce class sizes, and pay for curriculum materials, computers, art supplies and elective activities that characterize
high-quality schools.
Closing the Achievement Gap
Numerous proposals have been set forth to close the
achievement gap, including school choice, vouchers, and
charter schools. Perhaps the most ambitious endeavor
in this regard—and certainly the one that affects the most

students, is the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB), signed
by President Bush in 2002. NCLB is extremely comprehensive: within its 670 pages are provisions relating to everything from reading and math standards to counseling programs, school prayer, and dropout prevention.25
Its main focus, however, is to improve the academic
achievement of students in low performing schools, particularly in schools that receive Title I federal funds targeted for
low-income children. In brief, NCLB requires states to adopt
a specific approach to standards, testing, and accountability.
The test results—broken down by poverty, race, ethnicity,
disability, and limited English proficiency—are designed to
hold schools and students accountable for academic achievement, and NCLB establishes sanctions for schools that do
not meet annual test performance objectives.26
Debates over the effectiveness of No Child Left Behind
rage not only in the halls of Congress, but also in schools
across the country. While most educators and policy-makers
stress that the objective of closing the achievement gap is an
important one—and praise NCLB for focusing attention on
this issue—some are less sanguine about the ability of NCLB
to meet that objective.27 For example, many critics point to
inadequate funding: appropriations for NCLB have fallen far
short of what the bill authorized.28 Moreover, NCLB’s sanctions often reinforce funding disparities between wealthy
and poor school districts, since they impose additional costs
to meet federal mandates without creating mechanisms to
reallocate resources across districts.29
Even if NCLB were adequately funded, it is unclear
whether it fully addresses the reforms needed to close the
achievement gap. Increasingly, it is becoming clear that
Overview continued on page 23

6

Fall 2007

Early Childhood Education

The Power of Preschool

Early Investment Yields Solid Returns
By Kathleen Reich
Program Officer and Leader, Preschool Grantmaking
The David and Lucile Packard Foundation

I

n 1962, 123 low-income, African-American children
in Ypsilanti, Michigan began changing the course of
American social policy. The children, all 3 or 4 years
old, began participating in the Perry Preschool Project.
Children in the experiment attended a part-day, school-year
program for one or two years, aimed at enhancing their
language, math, logical reasoning, and social skills before
they entered kindergarten. The theory behind the Perry experiment—a randomized, controlled trial—was that preparing
children, especially low-income children, for formal education in the early years would give them a leg up once they
entered kindergarten.
That hypothesis proved correct—and dramatically so. The
Perry Preschool Project children are now in their 40s, and the
benefits of their time in preschool continue to accrue, both
to the individuals and to society as a whole. Perry participants fared better in the K-12 education system, repeating
fewer grades, needing fewer special education services, and
graduating from high school at higher rates than children
in the control group. As adults, their earnings were higher,
their rates of welfare receipt lower. And they were much less
likely to have become teen parents or been convicted of a
crime. In 2000 dollars, the Perry Preschool Project invested
$15,166 over two years in each child. By the time those children reached age 40, the economic return to society from
the program was $258,888, or more than $16 for every dollar
invested.1 (See Figure 1)

Fall 2007

Perry helped launch a movement to expand high-quality, publicly-financed preschool for children in the United
States, particularly low-income children and increasingly,
English language learners. This article describes the research
basis for that movement; how leading economists and business leaders have developed a business case for preschool
investment; challenges facing pre-K expansion; and efforts
in the Federal Reserve’s 12th District, as well as nationwide,
to ensure that more children in the United States enter kindergarten prepared to succeed in school and in life.
The Benefits of Early Childhood Education
Perry helped spark the growth of dozens of publiclyfinanced preschool programs. The largest is the federal
Head Start program, with a budget of $6.78 billion to serve
909,201 children nationwide in 2006.2 At least 40 states—including Arizona, California, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington within the Federal Reserve’s 12th District—also invest in
state-funded pre-kindergarten, mostly for 4-year olds.3 Most
of these programs are targeted to low-income children or
children who are defined as “high-risk” for poor outcomes in
elementary school, but a few states now guarantee universal
preschool for 4-year olds.
As public investment in these programs has grown, so
has the evidence base to justify that investment. Perry has
long been subject to criticism for its small, relatively homogenous sample, but evaluations of significantly larger public

7

Early Childhood Education
Small Futures
By David Kirp

“Preschool for all”—the slogan sounds great, but unless it translates into a high-quality education for three and four year
olds it’s a cruel hoax. Great prekindergartens can make the kind of lifelong differences that have excited economists and
others, from police chiefs to CEOs. But bad preschools won’t help kids—indeed, they may even do damage.
It isn’t only the usual suspects, the educators and child psychologists, who are talking up effective pre-kindergarten. Take
Lori Taylor, a former Federal Reserve Bank economist. Taylor, who is now an assistant professor at the Bush School for Government and Public Service at Texas A&M, studied the economic impact of pre-k for the Texas legislature. She concluded
that preschool is a smart use of public dollars—but only if it delivers high-caliber education. “The increment is well worth
spending,” she said. “Invest in high quality and the return is high quality. You get nothing back from substandard programs.”
Just what does quality look like? For a start, it means small classes taught by well-trained teachers who rely on a researchbased curriculum, teaching in a preschool that actively engages parents in their children’s education. From North Carolina
to California, Oklahoma to Florida, I crouched in pre-k classrooms while writing The Sandbox Investment: The Preschool
Movement and Kids-First Politics. I watched as children at well-endowed places like the 92nd Street Y in Manhattan and
the University of Chicago Lab school busily explored new worlds—but what I witnessed in far poorer communities was
exciting and eye-opening.
Walk into Laurence Hadjas’s class at Ray Elementary School in Chicago, and you’ll see the concept of quality come to life.
The children represent a Noah’s ark of racial and ethnic diversity, and their teacher, who has come to Chicago via Algeria
and France, is a master at her craft.
For much of the day these kids choose what they want to be doing. Hadjas is constantly walking around the room, taking
everything in and helping the children solve problems that emerge from their projects. In one corner, four kids are building
a bridge with Legos. Seeds are beginning to sprout in a planter box, and in the lie-down nook, a girl leafs through a picture
book. Two boys are feeding a bottle to a doll in the doctor’s office. A pottery shard sits in a box of sand; one of the children
has brought it in, and Hadjas has recruited an archaeologist from the university to talk about what can be learned from
such a piece of clay. There’s a folder full of menus from neighborhood restaurants, and the prices for take-out pizza help
kids learn about numbers. Amid the buzz of activity, the room is a picture of order. The children have learned to take their
turn, to put their things away, not to mix up the pieces from different games.
Ideally every three- and four-year-old would get an education as good—as rich and playful, as word-stuffed and ideafilled—as this. It’s not an impossible dream. While Hadjas has an instinctive sense of how kids learn, she believes that
“everything I do can be taught to other teachers,” and she spends several evenings a week doing just that.
Hadjas’s classroom is free—part of Illinois’ ambitious publicly financed pre-k program for three and four year olds. It’s
just one example of what quality preschool can look like. At the Chicago Child-Parent Centers, whose long-term impact
has been amply demonstrated, parents are involved in their children’s education both as learners and collaborators. The
centers, in the poor, mainly black and Hispanic neighborhoods of the city’s West Side, each has a room where parents can
hang out; classes for parents range from basic literacy and sewing to GED preparation; there’s a class on how parents talk
with their children and another for new fathers. The teachers are experienced, and their teaching is language-saturated.
“Words, words, words” is the centers’ guiding principle—that makes great sense, for poor kids enter kindergarten having
heard tens of millions fewer words than the offspring of professionals.
In Chicago and elsewhere, the best preschools work small miracles. These are the kinds of places that can reshape the
arc of children’s lives—that’s what makes prekindergarten, when well executed, a no-brainer public investment.
David L. Kirp is a professor at the Goldman School of Public Policy, University of California at Berkeley. The Sandbox
Investment: The Preschool Movement and Kids-First Politics, earlier excerpted in the New York Times Sunday Magazine,
has just been published by Harvard University Press.

8

Fall 2007

Early Childhood Education
Figure 1:

Chicago
Chicago
ChildChildParent
Parent
Center
Center

Costs and Benefits of Two High-Quality Preschool Programs

$6,692

Cost

Benefit

$67,937
Measures participants until age 21

$15,166

Perry
Perry
Preschool
Preschool
Program
Program

$258,888
Measures participants until age 40
$0

$50,000

$100,000

$150,000

$200,000

$250,000

$300,000

Sources: Schweinhart (2004) and Reynolds, Arthur J., et al. (2002). Notes: Chicago Parent Center
was
calculated
as(2004)
a two-year
intervention
this study. Chicago Child-Parent Center presented in
Sources:
Schweinhart
and Reynolds,
Arthur J., et for
al. (2002).
Notes: Chicago
an 18-month
interventioninand
Perry Preschool
1998
dollarsParent
and Center
Perrywas
Preschool
Program
2000
dollars. Program was calculated as a two-year
intervention for this study. Chicago Child-Parent Center presented in 1998 dollars and Perry Preschool Program in 2000 dollars.

preschool programs also have demonstrated impressive
results. For example, a study of 1,539 children who began
attending the Chicago Parent-Child Centers preschool program at ages 3 and 4 showed that they demonstrated higher
cognitive skills, greater school achievement, and less use of
school remedial services in early adolescence. They also had
significantly higher rates of school completion and lower
rates of arrests by age 20.4
Most recently, a study of 4-year olds attending the universal preschool program in Tulsa, Oklahoma showed that
the children experienced significant cognitive gains, including between 7 and 8 months in Letter-Word Identification
and 6-7 months in spelling, compared with children who did
not attend.5 The largest effects were found for Hispanic children, Native American children, and low-income children,
although statistically significant effects were found for more
economically advantaged children as well.
Taken together, the body of research on publicly-financed
preschool programs indicates that preschool is among the
more effective educational and social interventions in which
policy makers and parents could choose to invest. Upperincome parents have already learned this lesson; most of these
families pay for private preschool. But among low- and moderate-income children, rates of attendance are much lower.
Much of the reason for this is economic: the average
cost of part-time preschool for one academic year averages

Fall 2007

$4,022 in California, more than the cost of a year attending
a California State University full-time.6 Some private programs charge much more than that, and the RAND Corporation has estimated the cost of providing high-quality
part-time preschool in California at about $5,700 annually.7
State-funded programs do not come close to meeting the
need for preschool even among low-income children. Head
Start, for example, serves about 50 percent of eligible children.8 Preschool is not available to many of the children
who need it most: those students who are most likely to be
under-prepared for rigorous academic standards of the K-12
educational system.
Does Preschool Make Good Business Sense?
Although investments in preschool have stagnated at the
federal level, states have dramatically increased public funding for state-run preschool programs in recent years. In 2006,
31 states increased funding to early childhood programs,
appropriating more than $450 million in new money, and
no state legislature voted to decrease funding to state-run
preschool programs.9 Total funding for state preschool programs now exceeds $3.3 billion per year nationwide.10 In
many states, this investment has been powered by business
leaders and economists, including economists within the
Federal Reserve System.
Two of most influential scholars in this area are Arthur

9

Early Childhood Education
Pre-K: A Smart Business Investment
By Carl Guardino, CEO, Silicon Valley Leadership Group

Silicon Valley businesses, like their counterparts across the state, face a host of critical public policy issues: transportation,
housing and energy are a few. There is one, though, that gets scant attention: the need for effective pre-kindergarten for
all California children who want it. Just why would the CEO of a business organization such as the Silicon Valley Leadership Group want to get involved in efforts to help 4-year-olds who are decades from entering the workforce? There are
many significant answers. Here are three that carry the most weight with me.
First and foremost, better educated children make for a better prepared workforce. The research supports this. Study after
study has shown that effective preschool provides children – at an age when they are most capable of learning – with
the early academic and social skills they need to succeed in school and later life. If that isn’t proof enough, 95 percent of
California’s kindergarten teachers believe that children who attend preschool have an advantage over those who don’t.
Here in Silicon Valley (and elsewhere throughout California), a well-prepared workforce is critical to our ongoing business
success. The sectors that have driven that success thrive on a well-educated workforce. Companies in high-tech, the life
sciences, biosciences, telecommunications, software, defense and electronics sectors will continue to prosper only if they
can continue to find workers with highly developed, highly trained skills and education. And those workers build their skills
on a foundation of learning best gained in preschool.
Of course, the business world is not the exclusive beneficiary of effective pre-kindergarten. Our state as a whole is better off when our children are well prepared for their first years in elementary school. Those students will earn more, be
healthier and be less involved in crime. And that translates to a safer, richer and more productive society. One RAND study
found that every dollar spent in making preschool available to all California 4-year-olds would generate $2 to $4 in return.
Those dollars come through a combination of the students’ – some 500,000 a year right now – earning more over their
lives while costing the state less by staying out of prison and off of public assistance.
Then there is this disturbing fact: California is far behind many other states when it comes to providing effective preschool
to its children. The state ranks 24th in providing access to state-funded pre-kindergarten to its 4-year-olds and 20th in the
amount of money it spends per preschool student, according to the National Institute for Early Education Research. That
group also found the state’s preschools meet only 4 of 10 quality benchmarks such as maximum class size, teacher training and established early learning standards.
We do not want to see our state fall any further behind. Our children cannot afford it, and neither can our business community. By investing in preschool, we can keep California business where it belongs: out in front. Pre-kindergarten gets
kids ready to read and ready to learn, and when done right, is a proven investment in school success. With it, we can keep
our kids out in front, too.

Rolnick, Senior Vice President at the Federal Reserve Bank
of Minneapolis, and Nobel Laureate in Economic Sciences
James Heckman of the University of Chicago. Rolnick and
others argue that, instead of being seen strictly as an educational intervention, preschool should be viewed as an economic development investment—one that significantly outperforms more traditional investments in business and job
creation. They also argue that society is significantly underinvesting in preschool, and that preschool investments must
be sufficient to produce high-quality programs, where the
highest returns have been documented.11
Heckman’s work focuses on the benefits of preschool
(and other interventions in early childhood) that accrue to

10

the individual worker, and ultimately to U.S. productivity
rates as a whole. He points out that 20 percent of American
workers are functionally illiterate and innumerate, that these
workers create a drag on the economy, and that knowledge
and skill gaps develop within the first 5 years of life. “On
productivity grounds alone, it appears to make sound business sense to invest in young children from disadvantaged
environments,” Heckman has written. “An accumulating
body of evidence suggests that early childhood interventions
are much more effective than remedies that attempt to compensate for early neglect later in life.”12
Arguments like these have won broad acceptance within
the business community. In Florida, former newspaper

Fall 2007

Early Childhood Education
publisher David Lawrence led a successful, bi-partisan effort
to enact a constitutional amendment guaranteeing the right
to preschool for every 4-year old in the state. In California,
the late Lewis Platt, former CEO of Hewlett Packard and
Chairman of Boeing, appeared in a public service ad promoting preschool, along with billionaire developer Eli Broad.
BusinessWeek has named preschool one of its “25 Ideas for a
Changing World.” And major philanthropies, including the
David and Lucile Packard Foundation and the Pew Charitable Trusts, have invested significant resources to promote
preschool expansion in California and nationwide.
Challenges to Successful Implementation
Despite the strong economic arguments in favor of increased public investments in preschool, particularly for
disadvantaged children, significant challenges remain. First,
and perhaps most obviously, is funding. Effective preschool
does not come cheap. At a time when policy makers and
the public are struggling to find the best ways to fix failing
public elementary, middle and high schools, it can seem especially daunting to expand that system to encompass prekindergarten programs.
Ensuring that preschool programs are of sufficient quality to produce the results shown in the Perry Preschool
Project, Chicago, and Oklahoma may be an even more formidable challenge. The National Institute for Early Education Research at Rutgers University has developed a set of
10 quality benchmarks for state-funded preschool programs
(See Figure 2); the median score among states in 2005-6 was
6.5, and only two states met all 10 benchmarks.13

Figure 2:

Finally, the question of who should get to go to public,
presumably free preschool remains hotly contested. Advocates of targeted preschool programs argue that the most
compelling evidence in favor of these programs comes from
studies of low-income children, usually children of color;
that these children are the same ones who are likely to experience achievement gaps in school and low earnings in
adulthood; and that in an era of limited resources, it makes
the most sense to invest public funds in preschool for the
children who need it most.
Advocates of universal programs like the ones in Oklahoma argue that all children benefit from high-quality preschool, and that a publicly-funded universal program is the
best way to ensure quality and accountability. They also
point out that investments targeted to low-income children and families are chronically under-funded, compared
with universal programs like Social Security, Medicare, and
public education. Finally, they point out that in almost every
state, universal public education begins in kindergarten, and
few would suggest that parents, not the state, should shoulder the full expense of educating their 5- and 6-year olds.
Why, they ask, is educating a 3- or 4-year old all that different? Indeed, in many European countries public education
begins at age 4 or younger.
State Policies that Support Early
Childhood Education
In the past year, several states in the Federal Reserve’s
12th District have embarked upon expansions of state-funded
pre-K:

Quality Standards Checklist by States in the Federal Reserve’s 12th District

Quality Standards Checklist

Arizona

Comprehensive early learning standards

California

Nevada

Oregon

Washington

		

Lead teacher B.A. required			
Specialized teacher training in pre-K		
Assistant teacher CDA degree required					
Teacher in-service (at least 15 hours/year)		
Maximum class size 20 or lower

		

Staff-child ratio 1:10 or better
Screening/referral and support services 				
At least 1 meal/day				
Required monitoring/site visits
Source: National Institute for Early Education Research, 2006. Alaska, Hawaii, Idaho, and Utah are among the 12 states
that NIEER considers not to have a state-funded pre-kindergarten program.

		
Fall 2007

11

Early Childhood Education

Highly skilled, well-trained teachers are
an essential component of successful
preschool programs.
Photo courtesy of Preschool California.
• Arizona: In November 2006, voters passed a ballot
initiative that will raise $150 million annually to fund
early health and education programs for children 0-5
through a tax on tobacco products. A portion of these
funds will go toward preschool.14
• California: In June 2006, voters rejected a ballot initiative to create universal preschool system. However, later
that year the state allocated $50 million to expand the
existing pre-kindergarten program and $50 million in
one-time funds for preschool facilities. Local communities are also investing in preschool; the Los Angeles
First 5 Commission has allocated $600 million over five
years to its universal preschool program, LAUP.15
• Oregon: In 2006, the state increased the Oregon Head
Start Pre-Kindergarten program budget by $13 million
to $41.6 million as part of a two year expansion that
would fully fund Head Start in Oregon and serve 80
percent of all eligible three and four year olds.16 (See
Box: The Children’s Institute)
• Washington: In 2006, the state created a new Department of Early Learning to manage and oversee statefunded early learning programs and launched Thrive
by Five Washington, a private-public partnership also
designed to expand early childhood services and fund
programs to increase school readiness.17
Impressive as these investments are, states in other regions
of the country have made even greater strides. In Florida,
Georgia, and Oklahoma, the state guarantees universal access;
any child who wants to attend a state-funded preschool
program may do so, free of charge. Florida’s program went
into effect in 2006, but in Georgia and Oklahoma, where
the programs have been in place since the 1990s, about 70

12

percent of all 4-year olds attend. Other states, including
Illinois, New York, and West Virginia, have made legislative
commitments to phasing in universal preschool, starting
with low-income children first.
Conclusion: The Role for Business
Thanks to the work of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis and others, preschool is no longer seen as a nice
thing to do for low-income kids, or even as simply an important measure for enhancing school readiness. It is now seen,
appropriately, as a driver of future worker productivity and
economic competitiveness. As policy makers and the public
debate whether to expand publicly-financed preschool, and to
whom, business leaders can play a critical role on the issue.
Local preschool planning efforts, as well as statewide
early learning councils, need business perspectives and
active participation. Business leaders can serve as passionate and unexpected champions for preschool investments.
And banks in particular can support preschool expansion
through thoughtful investments in financing preschool facility construction; in California alone, creating a universal
preschool system would require facilities construction and
renovation costs of approximately $2.16 billion.18
One thing is certain: today’s 3- and 4-year olds are tomorrow’s workers, and they must be prepared to compete in
an increasingly crowded global marketplace. Preschool gives
proven bang for the buck in terms of raising student achievement, increasing worker earnings, and reducing crime. It is
not a panacea for the problems facing children in the United
States, but it is a solid investment with the potential for years
of payoff.
The author thanks Aimee Eng for her invaluable research
assistance on this article.

Fall 2007

The Economics of
Early Childhood Development
as Seen by Two Fed Economists

1

By Arthur J. Rolnick and Rob Grunewald*
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis

I

n comments to business leaders in Omaha, Nebraska,
regarding income inequality in the United States, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said, “Although
education and the acquisition of skills is a lifelong process, starting early in life is crucial. Recent research—some
sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis in
collaboration with the University of Minnesota—has documented the high returns that early childhood programs can
pay in terms of subsequent educational attainment and in
lower rates of social problems, such as teenage pregnancy
and welfare dependency.”2
The research cited by the chairman is contained in several papers we have written over the past four years on the economic benefits of investments in early childhood education.
In addition, we have participated in numerous meetings on
this topic hosted by other Fed public and community affairs
departments as well as our own.
So, why are we interested in the economics of our youngest children? Chairman Bernanke’s comments hint at the
answer. Much research at the Fed is focused on monetary
policy and banking issues; however, economists at the Fed
also study how economies grow and conditions that affect
growth. A key ingredient of economic growth is the quality
of the workforce, and public investments in human capital
development can have a positive impact. Economists—including those at the Fed—have been making this case for years.
We have gone on to argue that investments in human
capital prior to kindergarten provide a high public return.
Such investments—especially for at-risk children—can make
a substantial impact on the success of children’s futures as
students, workers and citizens in democratic society. That
is, the most efficient means to boost the productivity of the
workforce 15 to 20 years down the road is to invest in today’s
youngest children. According to James Heckman, Nobel laureate economist at the University of Chicago, “Enriching the
early years will promote the productivity of schools by giving
teachers better-quality students. Improving the schools will

in turn improve the quality of the workforce.”3 Moreover,
we contend that investing in early childhood development
yields a much higher return than most government-funded
economic development initiatives.

We contend that investing in early
childhood development yields a much
higher return than most governmentfunded economic development initiatives.
For well over 20 years, government leaders at the state
and local levels have invested in economic development
schemes with public dollars that are at best a zero-sum game.
In the name of economic development and creating new
jobs, virtually every state in the union has tried to lure companies with public subsidies. Previous studies have shown
that the case for these so-called bidding wars is shortsighted
and fundamentally flawed. From a national perspective, jobs
are not created—they are only relocated. The public return
is at most zero. And the economic gains that seem apparent at state and local levels are also suspect because they
would likely have been realized without the subsidies. In
other words, what often passes for economic development
and sound public investment is neither.
We don’t pretend to have all the answers to economic development, but we’re quite certain that investing in
early childhood education is more likely to create a vibrant
economy than using public funds to lure a sports team by
building a new stadium or attracting an automaker by providing tax breaks. Several longitudinal evaluations all reach
essentially the same conclusion: The return on early childhood development programs that focus on at-risk families
far exceeds the return on other projects that are funded as

*Arthur J. Rolnick is a senior vice president and the director of research at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, where Rob Grunewald is an
associate economist. The views expressed are the authors’ and not those of the Federal Reserve.

Fall 2007

13

Early Childhood Education

Large-scale efforts can succeed if they
are market based and incorporate four
key features: focus on at-risk children,
encourage parental involvement, produce
measurable outcomes, and establish a
long-term commitment.
economic development. Cost-benefit analyses of the Perry
Preschool Program, the Abecedarian Project, the Chicago
Child-Parent Centers, and the Elmira Prenatal/Early Infancy
Project showed annual rates of return, adjusted for inflation,
ranging between 7 percent and 18 percent.
These findings, promising though they are, pose a challenge: Small-scale early childhood development programs
for at-risk children have been shown to work, but can their
success be reproduced on a much larger scale? There are reasons to be skeptical; some recent attempts at scaling up early
childhood development programs have been disappointing.
However, it’s our view that those new programs failed in
large part because they were based on old models that were
ill-suited to get results. It’s time to seriously reconsider how
to effectively help our at-risk children and their families.
Based on a careful review of past and current programs, we
believe that large-scale efforts can succeed if they are market
based and incorporate four key features: focus on at-risk
children, encourage parental involvement, produce measurable outcomes, and establish a long-term commitment.
Achieving these characteristics in large-scale programs
requires the flexibility, innovation, and incentives that are
inherent in markets. For some, this is a radical idea, but
many middle- and upper-class families have long benefited
from the power of markets for early childhood education,
by choosing the early learning centers that their children
attend, and by demanding results from those providers. This
demand and supply system works. Why not give the same
purchasing power to those of lesser means? Our idea is to
use the strength of the market by empowering at–risk parents with resources to access high-quality early education.
Qualified early education providers would then have to
compete for the scholarship children; parents would make
the decision about which providers to enroll their children.
This market-based approach is in contrast to the more conventional approach of either increasing the funding of existing programs or adding early childhood programs to the
public school curriculum.

14

To establish a successful, long-term commitment to early
childhood development, we have proposed a permanent
scholarship fund for all families with at-risk children.4 Similar to endowments in higher education, earnings from an endowment for early childhood development would be used
to provide scholarships for children in low-income families
who aren’t able to afford a quality early childhood program.
The scholarships would cover child tuition to qualified programs plus the cost of parent mentoring to ensure parental
involvement. Scholarships would be outcomes-based, meaning that they would include incentives for achieving measurable progress toward the life and learning skills needed to
succeed in school.
Parent mentoring would include parent education; information about available financial, health, and human-services
resources; and guidance on selecting an early-childhood-development program. Research shows that reaching children
with multiple risk factors as early as possible is essential;
even age 3 may be too late. So we suggest that while scholarships would pay tuition for a child to attend an early-childhood-development program beginning at age 3, the parentmentoring program could start as early as prenatal.
What would such a permanent scholarship fund cost?
In Minnesota, we estimate that a one-time outlay of about
$1.5 billion—about the cost of two professional sports stadiums—would create an endowment that could provide scholarships on an annual basis to the families of children in Minnesota living below poverty. With the endowment’s funds
invested in corporate AAA bonds, earning about 6 percent
to 7 percent per year, we estimate that $90 million in annual
earnings would cover the costs of scholarships, pay for program monitoring and assessments, and supplement existing
revenue sources as needed for early childhood screening and
teacher-training reimbursement programs.
Compared with the billions of dollars spent each year on
high-risk economic development schemes, this type of an investment in early childhood programs is a far better and far
more secure economic-development tool. We are confident
that early childhood development investments driven by a
market-based approach which focuses on at-risk children,
encourages parental involvement, produces measurable outcomes, and secures a long-term commitment will achieve a
high public return. However, the full return on investment
will not happen tomorrow, but 10, 20, or more years down
the road. In conducting monetary policy, Fed officials have
a long-term view to keep prices stable and confidence strong
in the value of U.S. money. Perhaps it’s not so surprising to
read that the chairman of the Fed, economists and other Fed
staff are interested in the impact of a long-term investment
in our youngest children.

Fall 2007

Early Childhood Education
Ready for School
Expanding Effective Early Learning Programs for Children in Oregon
By Swati Adarkar, Executive Director, Children’s Institute

After years of research, organizing and advocacy, a coalition in Oregon has won a major victory in expanding effective early
learning programs for children who need them the most. In June, the Ready for School Campaign saw the results of its
hard work when the State Legislature voted to increase the state’s funding for Oregon Head Start Prekindergarten (OPK)
by $39 million so that 3,200 more children can attend. OPK is a comprehensive high quality pre-kindergarten program for
three- and four-year-olds living in poverty that works collaboratively with the federal Head Start program.

“Quality pre-k programs are the most effective and best
economic development plan you can have. Business is
attuned to this because they see it as an economic issue as
well as a social issue. Funding early education is right for the
kids and it’s right for the state. It reduces crime, improves the
workforce and increases the tax base. We’re going to have to
convince everyone that this is a very, very good investment
with a high rate of return. We can’t afford not to do this.”
—Richard C. Alexander, Founder of Viking Industries and Chair of the
Ready for School Campaign (Oregon Business Magazine, May 2006)

While investing in early childhood education may feel
like the right thing to do, the campaign in Oregon demonstrated that it is a cost effective approach that produces multiple benefits. Children who attend quality
pre-kindergarten programs arrive at school ready to
learn, and have a chance to break the cycle of generational poverty. When parents don’t have access to high
quality early learning programs for their kids it often
limits their ability to succeed in the workplace and can
contribute to housing instability. Many communities are
incorporating early learning into their poverty reduction
strategies, and school districts are seeing the benefit
of working with children before kindergarten.

Perhaps most intriguing is the argument that investing
in early education can be a powerful economic development strategy. Recent work by economists has shown that early childhood investments can have a significant impact in
creating higher tax revenues and lower social expenditures.
While the returns on these investments are significant, the long period before the economic benefits are realized, coupled
with a family’s inability to pay, calls for the type of public support that the Ready for School Campaign recently achieved.
The Ready for School Campaign was formed in 2003 by a group of Oregon business and civic leaders. As its first action
step, Ready for School focused on getting the Legislature to fully fund Oregon Head Start Prekindergarten. OPK was
producing excellent results, but only reaching 60 percent of the eligible children.
The strategy had a number of advantages. First, starting with OPK allowed the Ready for School Campaign to draw on
compelling research. Building an argument based on solid research and proven results was a key factor in the campaign’s
success. Second, the campaign kept the message focused and concrete: “We want the Legislature to fully fund OPK” was
one that decision-makers easily understood.
As important as the message are the messengers. In this case, they were prominent business leaders who not only gave
their names and financial support, but invested the time and energy to become fully educated on the issue and speak out.
Ready for School Chair and founder of Viking Industries, Richard C. Alexander, testified at hearings and made close to a
hundred visits with elected officials and opinion leaders to talk about the economic returns and educational benefits of
investing in OPK. It helped, as Mr. Alexander often pointed out, that none of the civic and business leaders involved in this
campaign “had a dog in the fight,” or any financial interest in its outcome.
While the recent increase in state funding is an important victory, much more needs to be done to ensure that all of Oregon’s children come to school prepared to learn. Building on the momentum from its recent success, the Ready for School
Campaign will now work to build a comprehensive early learning investment strategy for at-risk children 0-5.

Fall 2007

15

Schools and Community Development

Linking Community Development
and School Improvement
An Interview with Professor Mark Warren

W

hat sense does it
make to talk about
school reform while
the communities
around them stagnate or collapse?
Conversely, how can we succeed
in revitalizing inner-city neighborhoods if we don’t make the
schools better? In this interview,
Mark Warren,1 Associate Professor
of Education at Harvard University, argues that collaboration between schools and community development organizations is vital if we hope to revitalize neighborhoods and
provide high quality education.2

But when you think about it, across the country, what
types of institutions do you find in every neighborhood?
You find congregations, and you find public schools. So I
began by thinking about public schools as institutional sites
for strengthening and revitalizing urban communities, and
once I started doing that, I became very interested in the
interconnections between the two. It struck me as very odd
that those two worlds have, for the most part, existed separately in the United States for the last 30 to 40 years. Organizations that focused on neighborhood revitalization or
community development weren’t focused on schools at all,
and for schools, the communities were just the seen as the
backdrop—or the problem—that the schools were facing.

CI: How did you become interested in

researching the links between communities
and schools?

schools and neighborhoods seems pretty
intuitive—certainly for anybody who has kids
and has looked for a place to buy a house.

Professor Warren: For a long time, I’ve been interested

Professor Warren: I think families on the ground under-

in understanding what it takes to empower and revitalize
urban communities. My earlier research focused on the role
of community organizing as a strategy for doing that, and
the importance of people becoming involved in efforts to
make change in their own communities. Institutions are a
critical part of that—particularly in low-income areas they
can be seen as the anchors of many communities—and my
early work focused on the role of congregations and faith
based groups in community organizing.

stand it. And I think that more recently community based
organizations have come to understand it. They might not
know what to do about it, but they understand that they’re
not going to be able to deal with the issues facing the families in the community unless the schools get better. Today,
how children do in school is so fundamentally important to
their prospects for future life, more so than twenty or thirty
years ago when a high school degree still could lead to a
middle class life. That’s no longer true. On the other side of

16

CI: For most people, the link between

Fall 2007

Schools and Community Development
the coin, if families start to do better economically, perhaps
even due to a community-based organization’s economic
development efforts, they’re going to move out of the community if the schools aren’t that good.
Meanwhile, many public schools understand that communities matter, but they are isolated and overwhelmed.
They don’t have links to community groups, and even if
they think it would be a good idea to link the two together,
they don’t have any concrete ideas for how to do it. So they
keep their focus on curriculum reform and other withinschool issues. But if you’re a school in a neighborhood
where there’s a crisis in affordable housing, you may have a
situation where 50 percent of the kids turnover every year. In
this case, school reform is likely not to help at all. If we don’t
start dealing with housing issues in these neighborhoods—
and with jobs and other economic development issues—it’s
almost silly to focus that much attention on schools. As
Jonathan Kozol has written, if kids are coming to school
without health care, we need to deal with that issue. As education professionals, to say that’s not our concern doesn’t
really make sense to me. So I think, no matter how difficult,
we need to find ways to link school reform with community
development efforts.

If we don’t start dealing with housing
issues in these neighborhoods—and with
jobs and other economic development
issues—it’s almost silly to focus that much
attention on schools.
CI: So how can we think about bringing

these two disparate groups together?

Professor Warren: The idea of social capital can pro-

vide a useful framework for thinking about how to reconnect schools to their communities. When I talk about social
capital, I am talking about the resources that are inherent
in relationships of trust and cooperation among people.
Relationships are important to making anything work, but
particularly in places that lack human capital (e.g. education) or financial capital, social capital can play a very important role in bringing real resources into the community.
It’s not a panacea that will solve all problems, but it helps
to overcome the isolation characteristic of many inner city
communities.
All sorts of things can happen when these relationships
are actively fostered. When parents build relationships with
each other, then you really start to see a collective sense of

Fall 2007

Parent mentors participate in one of LSNA’s monthly
Neighborhood-Wide workshops.
efficacy and power that can mitigate against some of the unequal power relations that exist in poor communities. This
in turn can help to ensure that local initiatives respond to
the needs of families in the community. Some of the schools
I have written about have used these relationships to build
a large pool of parent leaders. In Chicago, for example, the
Logan Square Neighborhood Association (LSNA) turned
its considerable community development organizing background to the issue of education, engaging local immigrant
parents in the schools and building their leadership capacity
so that parents could become active decision-makers in the
community. A number of initiatives have grown out of this,
including a literacy ambassador program that brings teachers and parents into households in the community in the
evening to read books out loud and to suggest strategies for
helping children with reading. While the program focuses
on improving literacy in the community, it also helps to
further build the relationship between parents and teachers.
I think there are two important lessons from my research
that can help to inform how to build these relationships.
First, sending a note home in a student’s backpack will not
be effective in getting parents to attend a meeting—particularly if they are already strapped for time. The best way to get
people involved is if they’re asked personally by someone
they know to get involved. Second, too often the schools or
organizations fail to ask the parents what issues they’re interested in. It shouldn’t just be the professionals saying “This
is what you should care about.” Instead, the starting point
needs to be “What do you care about? What do you think
can be done?” From there, it becomes possible to create
meaningful collaboration between families and schools and
build towards addressing issues like curriculum development
that are central to teaching and learning.

17

Schools and Community Development

The Camino Nuevo Charter Academy in Los Angeles

CI: How can traditional community

development organizations help to
build these relationships?
Professor Warren: There certainly isn’t one way of doing

it. The type of community you’re in matters, and the type
of community development organization you are might
matter. But there are at least three models that seem to be
emerging in communities across the country. The first is the
community organizing approach, reflected in the work of
the Logan Square Neighborhood Association.
A second model is to approach schools as an institutional partner for providing some of the services in the community, like after-school programs, health care clinics, or
community learning centers for adults. Part of the idea here
is not just to create add-on services, but to use the services
as a starting point for building relationships with the school
and the wider community.
The third model is when community development organizations start a charter or semi-autonomous school that has
as part of its mission reaching out to the community. The
Camino Nuevo Charter Academy in Los Angeles is a good
example of that. The Academy was started by Pueblo Nuevo
Development (PND), a nonprofit community development
corporation, in response to the educational needs of lowincome immigrant families in the MacArthur Park neighborhood. In a series of conversations with local parents, PND
learned that more than 16,000 children were being bussed out
of MacArthur Park to schools in other neighborhoods, and
the children of the neighborhood’s low-income Latino families were not faring well at these schools. Many parents told

18

PND staff they wanted a neighborhood alternative for their
children, and the idea for a new charter school emerged.
One of the unique features of Camino Nuevo Charter
Academy is that PND has contributed to neighborhood revitalization in the neighborhood by renovating abandoned
buildings for their schools. With financial support from
LISC and LIIF, as well as from the philanthropic community, PND started its first campus in an abandoned mini-mall
in the heart of the neighborhood that was an eyesore and
contributed to the derelict feel of the community. Today,
PND owns several school buildings and leases them to the
charter academy, building financial equity that can be leveraged to invest in new properties. These projects continue to
help reduce blight and spur others to invest in the neighborhood, making the community a more viable place for raising
families. And since the families are much more strongly connected to each other through the schools than in the typical
housing development, the schools become a way to build
community capacity.
But it’s important to remember that charter schools are
very hard to do well. I’m hopeful about the possibilities of
these charter schools, but a lot of them—even successful
ones like Camino Nuevo—struggle in the first few years to
establish strong leadership. Showing an impact on educational achievement can be equally challenging. The changes
take a long time. As hard as any other challenge—affordable
housing, job training—has been, I think that school reform
is probably the most difficult thing any of these community
organizations has ever tried to do.
CI: What’s the potential to replicate these

efforts in other communities?

Professor Warren: I think the key is that any effort has

to start with reaching out and attempting to collaborate with
the institutions that already exist within the community.
Simply “scaling up” or applying the same model to every
community won’t work. There must be an indigenous effort
to build social capital and relationships, and to empower
people at any particular school so that they really own what
the reforms are. The best thing organizations engaged in
community development—including financial institutions—
can do is to look for promising things that are happening
locally and support them, either financially, or by helping
to build partnerships and connections to other resources
and networks. In the end, it’s the social fabric of communities that will determine whether the schools work well and
whether people stay and continue to invest in the neighborhoods. Community development organizations can be an
important catalyst for helping to weave this social fabric and
contribute to lasting change.

Fall 2007

Schools and Community Development
Community Perspective
The Carver Park Story: Safe Affordable Housing Equals Student Achievement
By Deb Drysdale Elias, Principal
George Washington Carver Elementary School, Yuma, AZ

When I first started as the Principal of George Washington Carver Elementary School in 1992, the neighborhood was a very different place.
Gangs, graffiti, and violence defined and dominated the Carver Park community. Children rarely played in the park across the street, families did not
picnic there. From my office window, I witnessed drug deals taking place
at park benches and had a clear view of the dealers’ houses less than a
hundred paces from the school.
Today, at the very spot where the drug deals went down, there’s a beautiful
fountain adorned with metal animal and tree shapes that children can play
in during Yuma’s hot summer months. The park is filled with families and
activities – it’s a safe place for the whole community. The drug houses that
I once observed from my window have been replaced with family-oriented
single-family homes.

Yuma’s new Stewart Vincent Wolfe Creative
Playground – Built in 10 days entirely by
volunteers (over 8,000 community members
participated), the playground was designed
with input from local school children.

The change is remarkable—in five years, the neighborhood went from
“blighted” to delightful. Drive through Carver Park today and you will see
an 80-unit apartment building, 36 townhouses, 50 new homes on sites
where only trouble existed before, and 60 rehabilitated homes, all of which
provide safe and affordable housing for working families in Yuma. Carver School has a new building to replace the old,
termite-infested structure, and the showcase Martin Luther King Community Center provides a home for teenagers, community events, and office space for non-profits.
The City of Yuma identified the Carver Park Neighborhood as an area for comprehensive revitalization in 2000 and worked
with residents to design the Carver Park Revitalization Plan. But it took the work of every organization and family in the
community to make the plan a reality. From the Arizona Department of Housing and HUD to the local Boys and Girls Club
and Police Department to private investors and financial institutions, each played a vital role in addressing the multiple
problems that exist in a community with a poverty rate of almost 50 percent. We tackled crime by implementing a community policing program and investing in street lights, and became an official Weed and Seed neighborhood site. We worked
to bring new supportive youth, family, and elderly services into the neighborhood, such as domestic violence prevention,
citizenship assistance, and summer jobs and job training for young adults. To date a total of $27.5 million has been leveraged for neighborhood revitalization, an impressive mix of federal, local and private dollars.
Carver School’s contribution to the revitalization was exceedingly important. As a landmark structure in the neighborhood,
the school became the center and symbol of the revitalization. The school, a familiar and safe haven for our families, hosted
community meetings, advisory board meetings, planning sessions, and became a point of contact and display point for survey results, minutes and agendas. An oversight board was created to ensure that the Revitalization Plan met the needs of
the residents and the neighborhood. Among the charter members of the board were the school principal and two parents
from the school. It was clear from the beginning that neighborhood revitalization and education were solid cornerstones
for this plan’s success.
As the Principal of the local school, the revitalization of the neighborhood may not be part of my official job description.
But I have made it a priority. I know that by providing affordable housing in a safe and stable neighborhood only good
things—better attendance and retention, less violence, less vandalism—would result at the school. Has it made a difference
in our test scores? You bet! In the last five years, 98 percent of Carver’s kindergarteners have achieved grade level standards in reading and writing. This is even more impressive when you consider that 75 percent of incoming kindergarteners
speak no English. Students now enter my school from a point of strength and confidence that is bestowed upon them
from the power of the neighborhood.
I encourage those committed to community development to embrace the little neighborhood school as you plan and design needed change. And I urge you to behave tirelessly as you seek to provide the incentives, grants, initiatives, tax credits
and waivers that promote the kind of partnerships that created the miracle of the Carver Park story.

Fall 2007

19

The Community Development
and Education Connection
Reviving cities, transforming schools
and engaging young people in the process
By Deborah McKoy, Director, Center for Cities & Schools, U.C. Berkeley

I

n its streets and alleyways, West Oakland, California,
retains the vestiges of an historic past: The first black
labor union, the Sleeping Porters Brotherhood, was
born here in the 1920s; this was the heart of the West
Coast jazz and blues music scene in the 1930s and ’40s; and
during the World Wars, shipbuilding industries on the Bay
employed hundreds of community residents. That proud
history, however, has given way to a challenged present. When
its manufacturing employers withdrew in the 1950s, the community’s prosperity went with them. West Oakland today is
afflicted by high poverty rates, abandonment and blight.
To tackle these issues, West Oakland is officially designated as a state and local community redevelopment area.
Over the past ten years, two HOPE VI grants have financed
local housing developments, and the area has received millions of community development dollars from foundation
grants. More recently, market-rate housing development has
moved in, as home buyers find themselves priced out of San
Francisco and other more traditional middle-income and
upper-middle income neighborhoods.
Concurrent with the neighborhood revitalization activities—but disconnected in terms of policy and planning—the
local McClymonds High School also received financial help
for comprehensive reforms. A Small Schools grant from the
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, along with other private
money, converted the large, comprehensive high school into
three small schools, an action designed to improve student
performance and create a greater sense of community within
the school.
Like West Oakland, decaying urban neighborhoods
around the country have become targets for community
development, and like McClymonds High School, many
urban public schools have been offered help to revive their
faltering academic agenda. However, as was the case in West
Oakland, these two programmatic efforts usually move forward with little collaboration, and sometimes even without
one hand knowing what the other is doing.
This need not be the case. At UC Berkeley, the Center for
Cities & Schools (CC&S) has been pursuing ways to not only
engage schools and students in the urban planning process,
but to build a framework for systemic change that will help
to align community development with school reform.

20

Community Development and School
Collaborations: Creating Systemic Change
The connection between good schools and good neighborhoods is intuitively clear and, for skeptics, the linkage
is supported by research. It would seem logical, then, for
school systems and community development agencies to
work together. By tradition, however, public schools and
the various agencies, public and private, that deal with community development have existed in separate silos. The
original motivation for this strategy was to protect schools
from the political wheeling and dealing that was thought to
characterize city government. Over the years, however, the
strategy has produced unintended but nevertheless negative

Engaging Youth in Urban Planning
One of CC&S’s programs, known as Y-PLAN (Youth—Plan,
Learn, Act Now), has been working with McClymonds
High School students to help them become engaged in
the changes happening in West Oakland. Mentored by
UC Berkeley graduate students, McClymonds’s students
worked with local community groups, government agencies, and private developers to create a vision for the design of the 16th Street Train Station project. The station,
the historic first western terminus of the transcontinental
railroad, had long been out of service, a rundown abandoned place that bred nothing but trouble.
After considerable study, the students proposed a series
of recommendations for the train station, including a job
center, a student-run dining car restaurant, a performance
and community space, and a photography exhibition highlighting the station’s relationship to West Oakland. The
students presented their ideas to the Oakland City Council, which approved the plan with intentions of including
the youth’s vision and ideas. “The train station for some
families represents the beginning of a new life and I believe that’s very important,” wrote Samirah Adams, one of
the student participants. The West Oakland model—one
in which policymakers and principals in community development and public education communicate and collaborate—may represent the beginning of a new life for many
similar communities.

Fall 2007

Schools and Community Development
outcomes, as community development and schools, both
targeting the same neighborhoods for improvement, have
lost the potential benefits of collaborative enterprise.
Recently, researchers, policymakers, and practitioners
have begun to make progress toward integrating community
development with educational policy and practice. Both
LISC and the Enterprise Foundation have established programs that focus on school-centered community revitalization, and a series of reports have been published that show
the benefits that can accrue when school reform and neighborhood revitalization go hand in hand. In Centennial Place
in Atlanta, for example, a new public elementary school was
built along with more than 800 new units of housing. Today,
the school is one of the city’s best; about 90 percent of its
students meet or exceed state standards in reading and math. Students work together on a neighborhood survey in
The existence of the school has become a selling point for Elysian Fields, New Orleans
subsidized and market rate housing.
As part of the PLUS Leadership Initiative, CC&S inBy and large, however, these are still idiosyncratic efforts, each designed to suit a particular situation or commu- vited sixty officials and community leaders from six Bay
nity; although they may eventually serve as models for use Area cities—some of them representing school districts and
elsewhere, this wider application is not part of the original others city government or related agencies—to participate in
intent. Nor are there effective channels to foster commu- a year-long Institute. Participants have access to training and
nication and share best practices among various projects, education, professional development, and opportunities to
with the kind of synergy this can build. As a result, there share ideas and challenges with other cities. While each city
remains a gap between successful local efforts to bring to- is pursuing its own plan, all PLUS city–school district projgether community development and school reform, and a ects have three common components: (1) they recognize
broader effort to foster systemic change in the way we ap- that the built environment (e.g., innovative school facilities, joint use or affordable housing development) impacts
proach neighborhood revitalization.
To fill this gap, CC&S is taking a deliberate systems ap- learners and must be connected with traditional educational
proach to addressing the historic disconnect between cities policy making; (2) they are developing intergovernmental
and schools. If high-quality education is a critical component strategies and practices; and (3) they are inviting youth to
of urban and metropolitan vitality, more resources need to join in policy making, decision making, and practice. Bebe directed to understanding how community development cause young people traverse not only school but home and
and school reform can be linked institutionally—to change it community in the course of each day, the Center believes
from a “once in a while” approach to the “normal” way of that their needs and realities must drive both educational
doing business. What administrative and data collection pro- and urban/metropolitan policies and practices.
In a recent meeting, each of the city teams shared ideas
cedures need to be changed to allow for cross-agency collaboration? How do we reframe the educational experience so it and described the resources and programmatic changes
becomes relevant to all members in the community, not just they have used to develop more coherent and coordinated
those in K-12? How can we adjust the tools of community de- pathways for children and youth to succeed in their comvelopment finance—tax credits, loans, investment capital—to munities, both as students and as citizens. For example, the
promote rather than deter collaboration? For example, while Oakland Unified School District described its new Youth
programs like the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit have ef- Data Archive (YDA), a data-sharing and data–integration
fectively brought financial institutions into affordable hous- collaboration in which school district, city, and county data
ing projects, they do not promote efforts to think holistically will be merged to look at the needs of the whole child. The
Emeryville team described the Center of Community Life,
about communities and invest in schools at the same time.
None of these questions are easily answered. But as a their effort to transform the school district into a learning
starting point, CC&S has launched the PLUS (Planning and campus for the entire city.
Based on the lessons and outcomes of this initial threeLearning United for Systems-change) Leadership Initiative,
a three-year program funded by the Walter and Elise Haas year project, the Center hopes to expand the PLUS model
Fund, to see what lessons can be learned when community/ throughout California and eventually across the nation. The
school collaboration is put into practice. The goal of the long term vision of this work is for urban and metropolitan
Initiative is to identify promising approaches while at the communities and public education to create integrated and
same time develop educational and civic leaders—both on mutually beneficial policies, practices, and governance sysand off campus—who are aware of the importance of con- tems, enabling all students—from all communities—to participate and excel in our economy and democracy.
necting city and school policies and practices.
Fall 2007

21

Schools and Community Development
Youth Engagement in Planning Nationwide
A Convening in New Orleans
By Ariel Bierbaum and Alissa Kronovet1

Over a hot late May week, young planners from around the nation convened as part of the Planners Network National
Conference in New Orleans, Louisiana. Twenty youth and adult allies came from Brooklyn, the Bay Area, and New Orleans
to show just what can happen when students are provided with an opportunity to engage in urban planning efforts. Over
the course of 4 days, participants learned about the current situation in New Orleans and brought their unique skills and
perspectives to the question “How can New Orleans be rebuilt into a vibrant, economically and racially diverse city?”
While city planning practitioners and community development professionals often seek to include diverse constituents,
particularly as a way to ensure equitable development across regions, they often overlook young people as key stakeholders in the community. But youth have a unique and important perspective on how cities function for its residents. Across
the country, a number of organizations and programs are seeking to enhance young people’s civic participation, to fundamentally change city planning practice by integrating youth into public processes, and improve the educational system by
integrating city planning and community development into school-based curricula.
Three such organizations joined together in New Orleans to grapple with the urban planning challenges facing the city
after Hurricane Katrina. Students participating in the Y-PLAN program directed by the Center for Cities and Schools at UC
Berkeley came to New Orleans after working on a real world planning project in Emeryville, where they had the opportunity
to learn how to work with residents, community organizations, and city council. Three-thousand miles away, in Brooklyn,
New York, students at the Academy of Urban Planning (AUP) had fine-tuned their urban planning and GIS skills through
unique partnerships with community organizations, planning agencies, and local colleges and universities.
And down in the Big Easy, students at the O. Perry Walker Charter High School (Walker) have been collaborating with
the non-profit, Communities In Schools of New Orleans, Inc (CISNO) to champion for connecting necessary community
resources with schools to help young people successfully learn, stay in school, and prepare for life. The collaboration has
spearheaded several successful initiatives for students, such as a youth leadership council that gives youth a voice during
the city’s recovery. In partnership with Walker, CISNO has facilitated arts education, mass volunteer events, music performances, positive behavior support programming assistance, and professional development related to identifying trauma
and building resilience.
Walker students acted as the hosts for this event, bringing their peers to New Orleans’s many distinct neighborhoods,
including the French Quarter and the Lower Ninth Ward. This trip was both educational and emotional for participants, due
to the intensity of this place and experiences that Walker students shared with the others. This was especially poignant
when the students visited the Lower Ninth Ward and the site where the levies broke. Walker students shared their personal
experiences of loss, relocation, and rebuilding. It was a powerful moment, as many of the young planners had never before
left their native cities or met other young people with similar urban experiences to theirs.
The students quickly jumped into the planning challenge, bringing the skills that they have learned in their respective programs to bear in New Orleans. Building on Y-PLAN students’ experiences of working on client-driven projects, participants
conducted a survey for the City of New Orleans Office of Recovery Management. In the Elysian Fields neighborhood of
New Orleans, students walked door to door, assessing which units were re-occupied since Hurricane Katrina, and which
remained vacant. Students also had the chance to speak with local residents and document their perspectives on the
recovery efforts.
AUP students led a lesson on GIS at the University of New Orleans, where they discussed projects they had worked on
documenting housing affordability issues in Bushwick, Brooklyn, and encouraged other students to examine their respective cities through this lens. And the Walker Youth Council invited their guests to a meeting to discuss their upcoming
campaigns and work. Students and their adult allies also facilitated a participatory workshop at the Planners Network
Conference entitled, “Youth Participation in Planning—Where do we Go from Here?” There was also time to socialize, at a
spoken word recital by one student at the opening ceremony and a crawfish broil hosted by Walker High School.
At the end of the week, students left New Orleans with new relationships and with increased knowledge of urban planning
skills and practice, knowledge that they will be able to apply back home in their own communities.

22

Fall 2007

Overview (continued)
‘standards’ and ‘accountability’ fail to address the underlying
causes for the achievement gap. In Class and Schools: Using
Social, Economic and Educational Reform to Close the Black-White
Achievement Gap, for example, Richard Rothstein argues that
efforts to improve educational outcomes are likely to fail
unless they also include efforts to close the economic and
social gaps children face outside the classroom.30 We believe
that two strategies are particularly relevant for the community
and economic development field: expanding access to high
quality, early childhood education and linking school reform
with neighborhood revitalization.

Efforts to improve educational outcomes
are likely to fail unless they also include
efforts to close the economic and social
gaps children face outside the classroom.
Early Childhood Education

Based on research alone, possibly the most important
investment in this regard is to increase investments in early
childhood education. As mentioned earlier, research has
shown that the early childhood years are vital in terms of
cognitive and social development, and represent a time
when children are particularly vulnerable to the negative effects of living in poverty.
Why is early childhood education an issue for community and economic development? Longitudinal studies
have demonstrated that high quality pre-school can provide
substantial benefits to socio-economically at-risk children,
with annual rates of return ranging between 7 percent and
18 percent, adjusted for inflation.31 (See Special Section:
Early Childhood Education). As Arthur Rolnick and Rob
Grunewald, economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, argue in their article in this issue, these rates of
return suggest that investing in high quality pre-school is an
effective economic development strategy—one that outperforms building new sports stadiums or relocating businesses.
The childcare industry is also an important source of
employment and business revenue. To provide just one example, in Washington state the early education industry includes over 9,000 small businesses and employs over 30,000
workers in licensed programs—more than either the retail apparel or hotel industry.32 Supporting this industry—by building childcare facilities and investing in childcare provider
training, for example—can help formalize and increase the
wages of those already providing childcare, and can support
working families in the community needing childcare. In
Los Angeles, for example, CD Tech is developing a strategy
to improve the training and capacity of early child development providers, addressing both workforce development
and childcare needs in tandem.

Fall 2007

While few disagree about the benefits of early childhood
education, there is less agreement about how to fund it.
Financing for childcare and early education primarily comes
from a patchwork of government programs, parental resources, and the private sector, and most of the cost burden still
falls primarily to families.33 Expanding access to high quality childcare will require new financing mechanisms, from
generating public revenues through innovative tax– and
fee–based approaches to public-private partnerships that can
provide capital investment for financing childcare facilities.
Linking Schools with Community Development

If access to high quality pre-school can help to mitigate
the negative effects of living in poverty at the individual or
household level, then community development and neighborhood revitalization are important strategies for mediating the effects of neighborhood poverty. Yet in many cases,
community development efforts have failed to connect lowincome families to strong neighborhoods with living-wage
jobs and good schools; instead, they have reinforced their
isolation from the rest of the economy by further concentrating affordable housing in poor communities.34
Increasingly, community development organizations are
moving toward more comprehensive strategies for neighborhood revitalization that take into account local needs, build
leadership among local residents and organizations and
invest in both “people” and “place” based strategies for poverty alleviation. (See Community Investments, Winter 2006)
Improving the neighborhood school should be a central
part of these efforts. As Professor Mark Warren notes in his
interview with Community Investments, the links between
neighborhood poverty and schools are intuitive, and efforts
to integrate education reform with community development
are likely to do more than pursuing each of them alone. (See
Special Section: Schools and Community Development)
Community based organizations, developers, and foundations have already been working in this direction, breaking
down traditional divisions between school reform and community development to coordinate their efforts to revitalize
neighborhoods.35 Community based organizations in cities
as far-flung as Baltimore, Chicago, and Los Angeles have
started charter schools as part of a comprehensive neighborhood revitalization strategy, and have seen improvements at
both the neighborhood level and in student performance.
Particularly in the context of HOPE VI redevelopment, research has shown that concurrent investments in the local
school reinforce the investments in housing in these neighborhoods, and vice versa.36
Both LISC and Enterprise have also expanded their focus
areas to include education. LISC’s Community Investment
Collaborative for Kids (CICK) offers financial and technical
assistance for the development of child care facilities in lowincome communities, and its Educational Facilities Financing Center (EFFC) provides financial and policy support
for financing local educational facilities, especially charter

23

Overview
The SF Fed in Action
Transforming the Way Economics is Taught
By Jody Hoff, Senior Manager, Public Information, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco

Nine states
Nine independent sets of curriculum standards
10.5 million school-age children
5,000 high schools…
And one question. How can the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco—with a long standing tradition of providing economic and financial education—effectively reach such a diverse population in today’s educational
environment?
Recently, our Public Information department took a comprehensive look at
the educational needs of the 12th District’s nine western states and determined that a new strategy would be necessary to deliver economic education
in a way that would be meaningful to students all around the District, from
High school students take on the role of
Anchorage to Yuma. We decided that this new strategy should transform
economic policy-makers from the Ukraine
the way economics is taught at the high school level and create innovative
and the Netherlands at the International
learning experiences that make the workings of the Federal Reserve System Economic Summit held at the University of
and the U.S. economy come alive for young adults. In the era of podcasts San Francisco.
and YouTube, actively engaging students is an increasingly important factor
in the success of educational programs. “Experience-based learning,” where student participation is not only part of the
learning process but actually changes and informs the outcome of the activity, integrates a level of engagement not possible in more traditional methods of instruction. Two of our key initiatives—the University Symposium and the International
Economic Summit—utilize this experience-based learning methodology.
The success of this approach is evident in the enthusiasm level of the students—after all, how often do you see a room full
of students excitedly discussing the federal funds rate or trade sanctions? In both of these programs, students become
the decision-makers and learn how their choices affect everything from the global economy to household spending and
homeownership rates.
Since its inception in 2002, the goal of the University Symposium is to enhance undergraduate students’ understanding
of the Federal Reserve System, with the focus on the Fed’s conduct of monetary policy. Several weeks prior to the Symposium, our Public Information staff provide faculty and students with a wealth of information on current economic conditions
and introduce them to current debates on the economy among market participants and monetary policy decision-makers.
On the day of the event, economists and experts from the Federal Reserve also give presentations on other Fed purposes
and functions, including the role of the Fed in banking supervision and regulation and the nation’s payments system. The
Symposium concludes with a real-time FOMC simulation, with university students taking on the role of FOMC members
and voting on monetary policy and the target federal funds interest rate.
In the International Economic Summit program, high school students participate in a world trade simulation that teaches
fundamental economic concepts within the context of international trade. The program challenges high school students to
think critically about the benefits and costs of trade and to explore the multifaceted process of globalization. Throughout
the ten-week curriculum, students work in teams as economic advisors to an assigned country, researching the social,
political, and economic conditions in order to create a strategic plan to improve living standards for their population. The
program culminates in a Mini Summit event at each school and a Regional Summit competition hosted at a local university.
On that day, students implement their plans through a series of guided activities that include negotiation of trade alliances,
debate of international issues, flag and concept quizzes, a trade session, and an awards ceremony.
In the first half of 2007, more than 400 college students participated in the University Symposium and over 4,000 high
school students took part in the International Economic Summit program. The numbers speak strongly to the value of developing innovative curricula that prepare students to become informed actors in today’s complex economic environment.
To learn more about these programs, as well as other educational efforts conducted by the Federal Reserve Bank of San
Francisco, please visit our website at http://www.frbsf.org/education/.

24

Fall 2007

Overview
schools. Enterprise’s School and Communities program
works to combine the large-scale physical redevelopment of
low-income neighborhoods with school reform, including
helping to build strong school leadership.
As Jill Khadduri and her colleagues argue in Reconnecting
Schools and Neighborhoods, school-centered community
revitalization does not replace what we already know about
what works to improve poor neighborhoods. Instead, it
encourages community development practitioners to think
of school improvement as a core neighborhood revitalization

strategy and to make sure that the other neighborhood
strategies (housing development, economic development,
workforce investment, anticrime) reinforce the school
improvement effort.37
The Role of Financial Institutions
in Education
For a financial institution, understanding where and how
to be a partner in education reform isn’t necessarily intuitive,
but in fact there are many ways that financial institutions

Branching Out
County Bank Moves into McLane High School in Fresno
By Sarah Scott

When McLane High School in Fresno, California, opens its doors on August 20,
2007, it will usher in not only a new school year but a new era in California banking and community outreach. On that day, County Bank will “go live” with its 30th
bank branch in a former classroom at McLane High School—a bank branch that
will be staffed and run by McLane students under County Bank supervision.
The idea of opening a school bank branch is not a new one, but it has only been
tried in a few places across the country. School-bank partnerships have been
successfully undertaken in Milwaukee and Chicago, but this will be the first student-run bank branch to open in California, and it will be the largest high school
campus in the United States in which a student-run branch will be located.
Fresno is an ideal location for an endeavor of this type, and the branch presents a great opportunity for community outreach. Fresno has a large unbanked
population, and McLane serves a low-income, minority population. With the Ed Rocha, President of County Bank,
opening of the Highlander Branch at McLane, County Bank has the opportu- addresses the crowd at a May 24, 2007 press
nity to reach students and their parents with financial education.
conference announcing the Highlander Branch.
McLane seniors majoring in a business-tract curriculum were recruited to staff the Highlander Branch. During the summer months, they were trained by County Bank team members, much the same as new hire, non-student team members
would be trained in tellering and new account opening procedures. In the fall, student team members will be enrolled in a
business course designed to compliment their banking experience. Besides receiving training and valuable hands-on work
experience in the bank, students will receive scholarship funds for their efforts.
Under the tutelage of dedicated school and bank staff, the students will be encouraged to make the bank branch their own.
They will elect a president and other bank officers, hold board meetings, create marketing campaigns, and extend financial
education to their fellow students, their parents and their community. Where high school students may be disinclined to
listen to teachers lecture about the values of money management and saving for the future, the hope is that they will listen
to their peers and take the advice to heart. Similarly, those parents and adults who distrust financial institutions will hopefully gain a greater comfort level with banking because of their children’s involvement in the student bank branch.
It has taken the joint effort of many public and private entities and individuals to make the idea of a bank branch in a
California high school a reality. The hope is that it will serve as a model for many other schools and banks in the state.
With the savings rate in this country at an all time low since the Great Depression, the time has come for banks to step
up with new partnerships for change. County Bank is proud to be one of those banks breaking ground in California with
its Highlander Branch.
—Sarah Scott, Vice-President, Compliance and CRA Officer at County Bank, proposed the school branch project in
September 2006 and has been acting as the lead project manager since its approval by County Bank’s Executive
Committee. Before entering the world of banking and compliance and CRA seven years ago, Sarah worked for 15
years as an Attorney Advisor for several federal agencies.

Fall 2007

25

Overview
are engaging in efforts that will help to improve educational
outcomes for low-income students. Banks are increasingly
making childcare facilities and charter school lending part of
their community development portfolio, or are making an
impact through investments in CDFIs that provide specialized lending expertise in this arena. For example, the ABCD
program, an initiative of the Low Income Investment Fund,
has leveraged $62.1 million in resources for child care facilities development in California since 2003, including $38.5
million from planning grants and $23.6 million from loans,

creating nearly 14,500 childcare spaces.38 And in many
communities, lenders, investors and other social entrepreneurs are providing social capital connections, financial resources, and management expertise through their work on
operations and school boards.39
Financial institutions also have a role in providing
access to financial education. Most students—from across
the income spectrum—graduate high school without a solid
understanding of economic and financial concepts. The
annual Jump$tart survey, for example, found that nearly

The Glow Foundation
Addressing Financial Barriers to College for Low-Income Students
By Joohee Shin, Executive Director of Glow Foundation and Fred Mendez, Director of Community Reinvestment at Silicon Valley Bank

Attaining a college education has many benefits for both individuals and the economy as a whole. But low-income students do not enter college at the same rate as wealthier counterparts.1 According to the Advisory Committee on Student
Financial Assistance, only 20 percent of low-income students are likely to attain a college degree compared to 68 percent
of high-income students. While many factors play into this disparity, what is particularly troubling is that even among those
high school graduates who are academically qualified to go to college, low-income students are far less likely to end up
obtaining a college degree than their high-income peers – 43 percent vs. 80 percent.2 Each year, an estimated 200,000
college capable low-income students graduate from high school but do not pursue a college degree.3
Why not? One reason is the financial hurdle of attending college. Three key financial barriers exist for low-income, college
qualified students in making it to and through college:
Lack of awareness of financial aid options Students in low-income communities often lack the critical awareness of
available financial aid options, which reinforces the problem of affordability. According to one study, 50 to 75 percent of
low-income students do not apply for financial aid or loans and/or do not attend financial aid information sessions.4
Lack of basic financial literacy skills and access to capital Limited financial literacy skills can limit low-income stu-

dents’ ability to plan, evaluate, and pursue college financing options even when they are exposed to the information. Poor
credit histories can also serve as a barrier to obtaining private student loans.
“Unmet need” in college financing With the rising cost of college tuition and a shortage of need-based grants, low-in-

come students are facing record high “unmet need,” preventing even the most committed students from pursuing college
attendance. (“Unmet need” refers to the gap in financing of college cost after expected family contribution and financial
aids including work study and loans.) In 2002, average annual “unmet need” for low income students was estimated at
$3,800 for four year public colleges.5 Low-income students may also spend excessive time working income producing
jobs and managing high debt levels, contributing to college drop-out rates and long term financial burdens.
Addressing this mix of barriers will require innovative partnerships among the public, private, and philanthropic sectors. The
Glow Foundation, a newly formed nonprofit organization based in the Bay Area, is trying to do exactly that. Glow begins
by partnering with local nonprofits that work in low-income communities to identify and develop college-ready students.
Once these students are identified, Glow works with financial institutions, college planning outreach programs, and local
business leaders to connect these students to financial education classes and mentors. The majority of Glow students
are the first in their family to go to college, and the financial planning process can seem daunting. By providing financial
education and individual mentorship support, Glow assists students in evaluating their expenses and finding funding for
their college education.
Finally, Glow provides grants to these students to fill the “unmet need” financing required to ensure college attendance.
While the grant size is relatively small, ranging from $500 to $5,000 depending on the students’ needs, it makes the difference in whether the student can ultimately enroll in college and earn a degree. In the words of Edgar Molina, one of
Glow’s first college attendees, “The Glow Foundation helped me get to San Jose State. They helped me understand my
tuition bill, find scholarships, and then awarded me the last $2,000 I need to enroll in a freshman year.”

26

Fall 2007

Overview
two-thirds of American high school students and adults did
not know that money loses its value in times of inflation.40
Yet in 2007, only 17 states require high school students to
take an economics course and only 7 states require that students take personal finance course.41 As a result, few high
school students graduate with the ability to interpret economic information and assess its significance for financial
well-being.42 Filling this information gap is especially important for low-income youth, who may be especially vulnerable to misinformation.43
Finally, many financial institutions are supporting the
pathway to higher education, from providing scholarships
to low-income and minority students to helping children
and parents build savings for education through Individual Development and Children’s Savings Accounts.
Some early research has even shown that efforts to promote child and youth savings can promote educa­tional attainment.44 The “Savings for Education, Entrepreneurship
and Downpayment” Initiative—better known as SEED—is
a national demonstration project designed to assess what
happens when children have access to a matched savings
account that they can use for asset building purposes.

Fall 2007

Although the demonstration is still underway, early results
are positive. By the end of 2006, 1,395 low-income children and youth in the United States and Puerto Rico have
accumulated nearly $1.5 million in their accounts in just
under three years.45
Conclusion
Certainly, there are good schools in poor neighborhoods,
and many low-income children succeed despite disadvantages
owed to their socio-economic background. But children
should not have to defy the odds to do well in school.
If we are serious about trying to tackle poverty in our
nation’s communities, we should ensure that the odds are
in low-income children’s favor. Community development
professionals—in the public, private, and nonprofit sectors—
all have a role to play in expanding access to early childhood
education and strong public schools, as well as to affordable
housing, health care, and safe places to play. Integrating
these efforts through partnerships and the strategic targeting
of resources holds much promise for reducing poverty
and improving educational outcomes for low-income and
minority children.

27

Endnotes
Back to School
1.

To read the entire text of the Court’s opinion in the Brown v. Board
of Education case, visit http://brownvboard.org/research/opinions/
347us483.htm.

2.

J. Yellen (2006). Speech to the Center for the Study of Democracy
2006-2007 Economics of Governance Lecture University of
California, Irvine, November 6, 2006.

3.

U.S. Census Bureau (2002) The Big Payoff: Educational
Attainment and Synthetic Estimates of Work-Life Earnings
(Washington, DC: U.S. Census Bureau, July 2002). Online at www.
census.gov/prod/2002pubs/p23-210.pdf. (Accessed August 13,
2007).

4.

5.

The difference in rates of participation in pre-school among children
in poor and non-poor families was 13 percentage points in 2005
(47 vs. 60 percent). Statistics reported by the National Center for
Education Statistics, Condition of Education 2007, online at http://
nces.ed.gov/programs/coe/.
National Center for Education Statistics, The Nation’s Report Card,
Reading and Mathematic Highlights, online at http://nces.ed.gov/
nationsreportcard/.

6.

National Center for Education Statistics, Digest of Education
Statistics 2006, Table 105. Online at http://nces.ed.gov/programs/
digest/d06/tables/dt06_105.asp.

7.

U.S. Census Bureau, Poverty Table 3. Poverty Status of People, by
Age, Race, and Hispanic Origin: 1959 to 2005. Online at http://
www.census.gov/hhes/www/poverty/histpov/hstpov3.html.

8.

G. Duncan and J, Brooks-Gunn, eds. (1997). Consequences of
Growing Up Poor. New York: Russell Sage Foundation.

9.

The magnitude of the effect of poverty depends significantly on the
outcome being measured as well as the duration of the poverty spell.

10. G. Duncan and J. Brooks-Gunn (1997). “Income Effects Across the
Life Span: Integration and Interpretation,” Chapter 18 in G. Duncan
and J. Brooks-Gunn, eds. (1997). Consequences of Growing Up
Poor. New York: Russell Sage Foundation.
11. Knudsen, E., J. Heckman, J. Cameron and J.Shonkoff (2006).
“Economic, neurobiological, and behavioral perspectives on building
America’s future workforce,” PNAS 103(27): 10155-10162.
12. For a review of the research on the neighborhood impacts on student
performance, see Sonbonmatsu, L., J. Kling, G. Duncan, and J.
Brooks-Gunn (2006). Neighborhoods and Academic Achievement:
The Evidence from the Moving to Opportunity Experiment. Working
paper 11909, National Bureau of Economic Research. Online at
http://ideas.repec.org/p/nbr/nberwo/11909.html.
13. South, S., E. Baumer and A. Lutz (2003). “Interpreting Community
Effects on Youth Educational Attainment,” Youth Society 35(3),
pp. 3-36.
14. Entwisle, D., K. Alexander, and L. Olson (1997). Children, Schools,
and Inequality. (Boulder: Westview).
15. Even before the Supreme Court recently limited the ability of
school districts to assign children based on race, the legacy
of Brown v. Board of Education on desegregation is far from
straightforward. In a series of court decisions during the 1990s,
the Supreme Court permitted Districts to end desegregation efforts
in neighborhood schools. This, combined with the demographic
changes accompanying immigration and fertility trends, has resulted
in an increase in segregation in elementary and high schools
across the country since the 1960s, most notably in Southern
and Border regions, but also in many metropolitan areas in the
Northeast, Midwest and West. See G. Orfield and C. Lee (2006).
Racial Transformation and the Changing Nature of Segregation.
(Cambridge: The Civil Rights Project at Harvard University).

28

16. D. Harris (2006). “Ending the Blame Game on Educational Inequity:
A Study of ‘High Flying’ Schools and NCLB,” Education Policy
Research Unit Working Paper EPSL-0603-120-EPRU, Arizona
State University.
17. G. Orfield and C. Lee (2005). Why Segregation Matters: Poverty
and Educational Inequality. (Cambridge: The Civil Rights Project at
Harvard University).
18. States often conduct their own assessments as well, such as the
California Standardized Testing and Reporting (STAR) Program.
19. Perie, M., R. Moran, and A.D. Lutkus (2005). NAEP 2004 Trends in
Academic Progress: Three Decades of Student Performance in
Reading and Mathematics (NCES 2005–464). U.S. Department
of Education, Institute of Education Sciences, National Center for
Education Statistics. (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office.)
20. National Center for Education Statistics, The Nation’s Report Card,
Reading and Mathematic Highlights, online at http://nces.ed.gov/
nationsreportcard/.
21. G. Liu (2006). “Interstate Inequality in Educational Opportunity,” New
York University Law Review 81(6): pp. 2044-2128.
22. The Education Trust (2006). Funding Gaps 2006. (Washington,
D.C.: Education Trust). Online at http://www2.edtrust.org/NR/
rdonlyres/CDEF9403-5A75-437E-93FF-EBF1174181FB/0/
FundingGap2006.pdf.
23. Filardo, M., J. Vincent, Ping Sung, and Travis Stein (2006). Growth
and Disparity: A Decade of U.S. Public School Construction
(Washington, D.C.: 21st Century School Fund).
24. Ibid.
25. The official text of the No Child Left Behind Act, as well as other
guidance and government policy documents, can be accessed
online at http://www.ed.gov/policy/elsec/guid/states/index.html.
For different academic perspectives on NCLB, see the Winter 2006
issue of the Harvard Educational Review.
26. After two years of failure, schools should receive technical
assistance, and an option is created for students to transfer to
another public school in the district. After three years, students
have the option to use their share of Title I funds to pay for tutoring
or supplemental schooling from a state-approved outside group,
such as a for-profit company or non-profit entity. In the fourth year,
the failing school must change its staffing. In the fifth year, it must
change its governance - for example, by converting to a charter
school, turning itself over to a private management company, or
allowing the state to take it over.
27. C. Lawrence (2006). “Who Is the Child Left Behind?” Suffolk
University Law Review, Volume 39.
28. Council of the Great City Schools (2006). “Shortchanging Federal
Education Appropriations,” Briefing paper, online at http://www.cgcs.
org/pdfs/BudgEdapprop117051.pdf. (Accessed August 10, 2007).
29. The papers presented at the 2006 conference Fixing Failing
Schools: Is the NCLB Toolkit Working? Provide an interesting
perspective on the successes and failures of NCLB. The agenda
and papers can be accessed online at http://www.aei.org/events/
eventID.1351,filter.all/event_detail.asp. (Accessed August 10,
2007).
30. R. Rothstein (2004). Class and Schools: Using Social, Economic,
and Educational Reform to Close the Black–White Achievement
Gap (Washington, D.C.: Economic Policy Institute).

Fall 2007

Endnotes
Back to School

The Power of Preschool

31. A. Rolnick and R. Grunewald, “A Proposal for Achieving High
Returns on Early Childhood Development,” Working Paper, Federal
Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, March 2006. Online at http://www.
minneapolisfed.org/research/studies/earlychild/highreturn.pdf

1.

Schweinhart, L., J. Montie, Z. Xiang, W. S. Barnett, C. R. Belfield, and
M. Nores (2005)., “Lifetime Effects: The High/Scope Perry Preschool
Study Through Age 40.” (Monographs of the High/Scope Educational
Research Foundation, 14), Ypsilanti, MI: High/Scope Press.

32. L. Calman and L. Tarr-Whelan (2005) Early Childhood Education
for All: A Wise Investment. (New York: Legal Momentum Family
Initiative), p. 10.

2.

33. Mitchell, A., L. Stoney, and H. Dichter (2001). Financing Child
Care in the United States. (Kansas City: Ewing Marion Kauffman
Foundation)

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Head Start Program
Fact Sheet Fiscal Year 2007. Administration of Children &Families.
Office of Head Start. Online at http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/
hsb/research/2007factsheet.pdf (accessed July 14, 2007).

3.

34. A. Berube and B. Katz (2005). Katrina’s Window: Confronting
Concentrated Poverty Across America. (Washington, D.C.: The
Brookings Institution)

“Leadership Matters: Governor’s Pre-K Proposals.” PreK Now
(April 2007). Online at http://www.preknow.org/documents/
LeadershipReport_Apr2007.pdf (accessed July 16, 2007).

4.

35. Khadduri, J., H. Schwartz, and J. Turnham (2007). Reconnecting
Schools and Neighborhoods: An Introduction to School-Centered
Community Revitalization (Columbia, MD: Enterprise).

Reynolds, A., J. Temple, D. Robertson, and E.. Mann (2002). “Age 21
Cost-Benefit Analysis of the Title I Chicago Child-Parent Centers,”
Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, Vol. 24, No. 4: 267-303.

5.

Gormley, W., T. Gayer, D. Phillips, and B. Dawson (2005). “The Effects
of Universal Pre-K on Cognitive Development,” Developmental
Psychology, Vol. 41, No. 6: 872-884.

6.

“Paying the Price for the High Cost of Preschool in California.”
Fight Crime: Invest in Kids California. (2006). Online at http://
www.fightcrime.org/ca/preschoolcost/capreschoolcostreport.pdf
(accessed July 11, 2007).

7.

39. J. Nowak (2006). “Concluding remarks: entrepreneurship in low
and moderate income communities,” Conference Proceedings,
Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, Missouri, November 3-4,
2005. Online at http://www.kansascityfed.org/publicat/commaffrs/
15%20Nowak.pdf.

L. Karoly and J. Bigelow (2005). “The Economics of Investing in
Universal Preschool Education in California.” The RAND Corporation:
89. Online at http://www.rand.org/pubs/monographs/MG349/
(accessed July 31, 2007)

8.

40. Jump$tart Coalition (2004). 2004 Jump$tart Coalition Survey
Results. (Washington, D.C.: The Jump$tart Coalition for Personal
Financial Literacy).

Barnett, W. S., J. Hustedt, L. Hawkinson, and K. Robin (2006). “The
State of Preschool 2006.” National Institute for Early Education
Research. Online at http://nieer.org/yearbook/pdf/yearbook.pdf
(accessed July 31, 2007).

9.

PreK Now. (October 2006). “Votes Count: Legislature Action on
Pre-K Fiscal Year 2007.” Online at http://preknow.org/documents/
LegislativeReport_Oct2006.pdf (accessed July 11, 2007).

36. Ibid.
37. Ibid.
38. For more information about the ABCD Initiative, see Noni Ramos
(2004). “The Next Stage in Childcare Facilities Development,”
Community Investments, 16(1). Online at http://www.frbsf.org/
publications/community/investments/0405/article3.html or visit
http://www.liifund.org/.

41. National Council on Economic Education (2007). Survey of the
States: Economic and Personal Finance Education in Our
Nation’s Schools in 2007 (New York: National Council on Economic
Education).
42. R. Lerman and E. Bell (2006). Financial Literacy Strategies: Where
Do We Go From Here? (Washington, D.C.: The Urban Institute).
43. E. Johnson and M. Sherraden (2007). “From Financial Literacy to
Financial Capability Among Youth,” Journal of Sociology & Social
Welfare 34(3): 119-145.

10. Barnett, W. S., J. Hustedt, L. Hawkinson, and K. Robin (2006).
11. A. Rolnick and R. Grunewald (2003). “Early Childhood Development:
Economic Development with a High Public Return.” Fedgazette.
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, March 2003.
12. J. Heckman and D.V. Materov (2004). “The Productivity Argument
for Investing in Young Children: Working Paper 5.” Invest in Kids
Working Group, Committee for Economic Development, Washington
DC, 2004.

44. Beverly, S. T. McDonald, D. Page-Adams and E. Scanlon (2001).
Assets, Health, and Well-Being: Neighborhoods, Families,
Children and Youth. (St. Louis: Center for Social Development). For
more research on the lessons learned from children’s savings accounts,
visit the Center for Social Development’s website at http://gwbweb.
wustl.edu/csd/SEED/seed_researchpapers.htm. See also R. Watson
and C. Rist (2006). Banking on SEED: Lessons from Financial
Institutions in the SEED Initiative. (Washington, D.C.: CFED).

13. Barnett, W. S., J. Hustedt, L. Hawkinson, and K. Robin (2006).

45. L. R. Mason, V. Loke, M. Clancy, Y. Nam, Y. Kim, and S. Lo (2007).
SEED Participant Characteristics and Financial Accumulation
(St. Louis: Center for Social Development).

18. Munger, M., E. Ling, G. Kim and P. Manzo (2007). “California’s
Preschool Space Challenge: what preschool advocates, parents and
policy-makers need to know.” Advancement Project. Los Angeles, CA.

Fall 2007

14. PreK Now. (October 2006).
15. Ibid.
16. PreK Now. (April 2007). “Leadership Matters: Governor’s Pre-K
Proposals.” Online at http://www.preknow.org/documents/
LeadershipReport_Apr2007.pdf (accessed July 16, 2007).
17. PreK Now. (October 2006).

29

Endnotes
The Economics of Early Childhood
Development as Seen by Two Fed
Economists
1.

This commentary is partially based on an article previously published
in Education Week: A. Rolnick and R. Grunewald, “Early Intervention
on a Large Scale,” Education Week 26, no. 17, (January 4, 2007):
32, 34-36.

2.

Chairman Ben S. Bernanke, “The Level and Distribution of Economic
Well-Being,” Remarks before the Greater Omaha Chamber of
Commerce, Omaha, Neb., February 6, 2007. Online at
http://federalreserve.gov/BoardDocs/Speeches/2007/20070206/
default.htm

3.

J. Heckman and D. Masterov, “The Productivity Argument for
Investing in Young Children,” Early Childhood Research Collaborative,
Discussion Paper 104, August 2006, 43. Online at http://www.
earlychildhoodrc.org/papers/DP104.pdf

4.

For a detailed description of the scholarship fund, see A. Rolnick
and R. Grunewald, “A Proposal for Achieving High Returns on Early
Childhood Development,” Working Paper, Federal Reserve Bank of
Minneapolis, March 2006. Online at http://www.minneapolisfed.
org/research/studies/earlychild/highreturn.pdf

Linking Community Development and
School Improvement
1.

Mark Warren is the author of Dry Bones Rattling: Community
Building to Revitalize American Democracy, which studies the
Texas/Southwest Industrial Areas Foundation, the nation’s most
prominent faith-based community organizing network.

2.

For more details, see M. Warren (2004). “Linking Community
Development and School Improvement,” A Report prepared
for the Ford Foundation, online at http://www.lsna.net/display.
aspx?pointer=2515.

30

Youth Engagement in Planning Nationwide
1.

Ariel Bierbaum is the Program Manager at the Center for Cities
& Schools, UC Berkeley. She manages the Y-PLAN program, as
well as the broader Youth, Schools, and Planning Initiative, which
includes professional development, capacity-building, and research
around youth engagement in planning practice. Alissa Kronovet is
a candidate in the Master of City Planning program at UC Berkeley
and a research fellow with the Center for Cities & Schools. In
addition to coordinating the New Orleans trip, Alissa is heading up
the national organizing efforts around the Young Planners Network.

The Glow Foundation
1.

L. Muraskin and J. Lee (2004) “Raising the Graduation Rates of
Low-Income College Students” (Washington: The Pell Institute for
the Study of Opportunity In Higher Education).

2.

Advisory Committee on Student Financial Assistance (2006).
Mortgaging Our Future: How Financial Barriers to College
Undercut America’s Global Competitiveness. (Washington, D.C.:
Advisory Committee on Student Financial Assistance).

3.

“In their Words”, College Summit, 15 April, 2007, <http://www.
collegesummit.org/school-districts/>

4.

Bedsworth, W., S. Colby and J. Doctor (2006). Reclaiming the
American Dream (Boston: Bridgespan).

5.

Advisory Committee on Student Financial Assistance (2002).
The Empty Promises: The Myth of College Access in America
(Washington, D.C.: Advisory Committee on Student Financial
Assistance).

Fall 2007

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
Office of Thrift Supervision
invite you to attend the

2008 National Interagency
Community Reinvestment Conference

March 30 – April 2, 2008
San Francisco, California
Featuring CRA examination training

Innovations in community development investing
Creative strategies for community development
National Community Development Lending School

For more information, please visit
www.frbsf.org/community/conference08.html

Registration materials will be available in January
Conference Contact: Lauren Mercado-Briosos • 415-974-2765 • lauren.mercado-briosos@sf.frb.org

The views expressed are not necessarily those
of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
or the Federal Reserve System. Material herein
may be reprinted or abstracted as long as
Community Investments is credited. Please provide
Naomi Cytron in the Community Development
Department with a copy of any publication in
which such material is reprinted.

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