New program addresses local educational inequities
Laura L贸pez鈥檚 14-year-old daughter came home from school puzzled. 鈥淵ou must have talked with my math teacher,鈥 she probed.
L贸pez had not contacted the teacher, but her daughter鈥檚 CU 麻豆影院 tutor had. Lexie Van Voorhees, a secondary education student in the CU 麻豆影院 School of Education, told the teacher about the teenager鈥檚 capabilities in mathematics and the anxieties limiting the dynamics between a teacher and student from different backgrounds.
That simple but compassionate heart-to-heart afforded perspective to the teacher and resulted in a complete turnaround in L贸pez鈥檚 daughter鈥檚 relationship with her teacher and mathematics.
L贸pez is a member of the CU 麻豆影院 maintenance team, and she has seven kids, ages 2鈥17, participating in the School of Education鈥檚 new Buffs for Front Line Service Employees (Buffs4FLSE) program.
Buffs4FLSE offers in-person sessions, online academic support and a 5-week summer camp for the school-age children of the university鈥檚 essential employees at no cost. The program grew out of the need to provide immediate educational support to families disproportionately affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, but its equity mission and multigenerational educational support aims to endure beyond the pandemic.
A troubling trend
At the start of the 2020鈥21 school year, news spread nationwide that many parents planned to pool their resources to hire private teachers and create 鈥渓earning pods鈥 for聽their children because of shifts to remote learning settings. This was a troubling trend for many educational researchers, including Wagma Mommandi, a doctoral candidate who now co-directs Buffs4FLSE with recent doctoral graduate 脕ngeles Osorio Cooper.
鈥淚 will not criticize what parents do individually, but it became clear that this was becoming a situation where the collective action of privileged parents was exacerbating long-standing equity gaps,鈥 Mommandi said.
She took her frustrations to Twitter, where she synced up with School of Education Dean Kathy Schultz and Assistant Professor Melissa Braaten, who were also concerned about deepening inequities as wealthy families formed learning pods.
The heartbeat of the university
Together, they agreed on creating programs that immediately support the families of the university鈥檚 front line service employees, essential workers who have been working throughout the pandemic to keep campus safe and clean, serve nourishing foods, and attend to the grounds that help CU 麻豆影院 earn accolades as one of most beautiful campuses in the nation.
The team worked with Craig Cook, human resources program manager for CU 麻豆影院鈥檚 550-plus front line service employees, to gauge interest in and spread the word about the developing program.
鈥淢y first initial reaction was: 鈥榳ow,鈥 and to be honest, it was one of those: 鈥榳ow, it鈥檚 about time,鈥欌 said Cook. 鈥淲e have all these departments鈥攊ncluding the School of Education, language support, the business school鈥攖hat can benefit聽every individual on campus who has a desire to better themselves.鈥
Cook has spent 16 years on campus, including time as a cook, chef and manager, and he is an advocate for supporting the university鈥檚 large contingent of diverse service employees.
鈥淔ront line service employees are the heartbeat of the university. Without them, the university doesn't exist,鈥 he said.
An idea into action
Mommandi and Osorio Cooper credit community support and Dean Schultz鈥檚 leadership for helping turn an idea into a reality. The program continues to this day thanks to financial support from the chancellor鈥檚 office and donors like alumna Chris Willis.
It was clear that this program was a great fit for what I wanted to be able to do as a donor. It feels so good to know that our initial gift is likely to make a difference both during the pandemic and in the long term.鈥
鈥淚t was clear that this program was a great fit for what I wanted to be able to do as a donor,鈥 said Willis (PhDEdu鈥02).
鈥淢y personal involvement in education is driven primarily by a desire to make a difference in the lives of the underserved and disenfranchised, along with a聽commitment to the importance of that goal in pursuit of a healthier and more stable democracy in this country.
鈥淚t feels so good to know that our initial gift is likely to make a difference both during the pandemic and in the long term.鈥
Keeping it up
L贸pez and the other parents in the program also hope the program will continue for years to come. They see their children flourishing, and at school, teachers are taking note, too. One teacher told L贸pez: 鈥淲hatever you are doing, keep it up.鈥
Parents go to great lengths to integrate Buffs4FLSE into their busy work and family schedules, but they enjoy sharing CU 麻豆影院 and a window into higher education with their children.
鈥淭hey feel a part of the CU 麻豆影院 community now,鈥 L贸pez said.