Author Archives: OneVille Project

OneVille Report From Healey Parent Forum at Mystic Activity Center

Changes are happening at the Healey School in Somerville, and this is an important time to seek out and carefully listen to parent opinions. A new principal, Jason DeFalco, arrives at the Healey School on 1 July 2010. Important decisions about the structure of the Healey School are being considered by the School Committee this month.

Read comments and feedback shared at the May 1st forum in the PDF Report prepared by OneVille.

Twenty parents and community members came together with Spanish, Krèyol and Portuguese translators to discuss the future of the Healey for three hours at the Mystic Activity Center on Saturday, May 1, 2010, over a homemade meal. The meeting was friendly and comments seemed frank and sincere. Parents took full advantage of what they expressed was a rare opportunity to talk across lines of Healey programs, race, class, and language; they noted that many misconceptions they had about one another were raised and discussed. After an introduction activity that had us declaring roots from across the country and world, we mused about the absence of parents with long generational roots in Somerville. Several noted that the forum would have been made even better by a stronger showing of parents whose children attended only the Neighborhood program (many parents in attendance had children in both the Choice and Neighborhood programs).

Parents offered opinions about the kind of school they wanted. At the same time, they expressed confusion about the difference between the Healey’s programs, and concerns about an uncertain future for the school and the impact of this moment’s instability on children. Three issues that generated spirited and varied responses were:

  • parent involvement and outreach opportunities that increase children’s academic success;
  • access to activities and field trips across programs, along with the parent resources required to make them happen, and
  • teaching an array of skills that children now need to handle diverse 21st century environments, especially communication skills and the capacity to speak a second language.

The meeting ended with a straw poll about the three options for the Healey School that stirred strong emotions among participants. The majority of participants felt that the options to either maintain and/or combine the Choice and Neighborhood programs would benefit children most. Only one participant chose having a separate school for the Choice program as one of the two options marked on their poll. Most participants felt they could not be sure about which option was best for children until they had more particulars about how the Choice and Neighborhood would be blended and whether or not some important practices in the Choice Program would be maintained after the merge.

Key questions raised at this parent forum were passed on to the Healey’s principal, Mr. Sabin, who answered them by invitation at the OneVille bi-monthly Multilingual Parents’ Coffee Hour held on Friday, 7 May 2010.

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OneVille: Community Cooperation in Young People’s Success

We’re writing to introduce a community project in Somerville called OneVille. Our goal? Uniting people in our vibrant, diverse city around pursuing the success of every young person. How can we work together so that every Somerville student graduates from high school college- and career-ready, and also intellectually, creatively, and civically engaged? How can we make the resources, knowledge, and skills available in Somerville available to each young person and family? No city in the country acts this way. We think that Somerville has the energy to try.

We believe strongly that to pursue young people’s success, people who share communities need to communicate about how young people are doing and work together to provide opportunities to every child. Right now, we’re learning from folks across the city about existing communications and relationships affecting young people. Mica Pollock, a Somerville parent and faculty at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, started us off and now leads our research. We are now a community research team supported by a two year planning grant from the Ford Foundation, to pilot projects in partnership with the school district, the city, and Somerville’s rich network of young people, agencies, teachers, families, and volunteers. Over the next 1.5 years, we hope to make recommendations for tools and strategies that support ongoing conversation and partnership among the people in Somerville young people’s lives. We also hope to offer other cities ideas for how diverse communities can partner in student success in the 21st century.

We are assembling a “toolkit” of face to face strategies and simple, free communication tools (using cell phones and computers) that would support everyday communication and partnership between the people in each young person’s life. Such tools could include:

• Multilingual events and community dialogues, designed to build community face to face;

• e-portfolios, designed at the High School, which would support students and teachers in running conversations about improving student learning;

• “teams” and mentoring partnerships for every young person, with mentors using private social networking tools to communicate with students about students’ ongoing progress and learning experiences;

• a multilingual community dashboard that could show community members and educators a quick view of student progress;

• online forums engaging community members of all ages in naming specific experiences affecting young people positively and negatively;

• a community search engine (or merger of listserves) allowing people to search for opportunities available for kids in the community.

Put together, we hope these tools would support people of all ages to rapidly meet young people’s needs. We’re committed to figuring out how people could participate if they don’t own computers, and how to support communication across language barriers.

Connect with us at www.oneville.org to share your ideas, or to volunteer as a computer trainer, dialogue leader, translator, or mentor. You can also contact Mica Pollock at 617 290 9903 (mica.pollock@gmail.com), or Consuelo Perez, OneVille’s family outreach coordinator, at 617 669 8598 (Copeal2002@yahoo.com). We look forward to working with you.

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