69传媒 across the country are preparing to formally track students from military families, monitoring their academic progress as they move from military base to military base and state to state, under a new provision in the main federal K-12 education law.
The change comes in response to concerns raised by the U.S. Department of Defense that the children of active-duty members of the Army, Navy, Coast Guard, Air Force, and Marines have academic and emotional needs that schools are ill-equipped to meet.
At Chula Vista鈥檚 Veterans Elementary School, a new effort to support students from military families already is underway to help students like 5th grader Victoria Ayekof.
She had a rough start when she arrived last fall from a U.S. Navy base in Ghana, where her father was stationed. Veterans Elementary is Victoria鈥檚 fifth school in five years, and in the beginning the adjustment was tough.
Her mother, Joyce Ayekof, said school staff reported her daughter was 鈥渁lways isolated and crying.鈥
鈥淵ou have to adjust, but it鈥檚 really hard to adjust,鈥 Victoria said. 鈥淵ou miss your old friends.鈥
Military children move an average of six to nine times before high school graduation, according to the Defense Department, but repeating the social and academic upheaval doesn鈥檛 necessarily make it easier.
Having a parent away on military duty is a major stress on the family. Research has found that military children who have a parent deployed are more frequently diagnosed with acute stress, depression, and behavior problems than other children and that these mental health issues can affect learning.
Supporting Vulnerable 69传媒
California is home to the largest number of active-duty military in the country, according to the Council of State Governments. Half of the state鈥檚 60,000 military-connected students live in San Diego County, according to military officials.
But even there, school districts don鈥檛 always know which students are from military families or how to address the academic gaps and anxiety they are more likely to have, particularly in 鈥渙utlier districts where there isn鈥檛 a concentration of military-connected children,鈥 said Kate Wren Gavlak, the chair of the Military Interstate Children鈥檚 Copact Commission, a national organization run by the Council of State Governments.
The Every Student Succeeds Act鈥攖he federal law passed in December to replace the No Child Left Behind Act and that takes effect in the 2017-18 school year鈥攊ncludes new data and transparency requirements for states and districts when it comes to vulnerable groups of students, including those from military families.
Among those provisions, school-age children in military families will be assigned an identification number known as a 鈥渕ilitary student identifier鈥 that will allow schools to keep tabs on test scores, graduation rates, and other metrics.
Implementation details have yet to be announced by the U.S. Department of Education.
The mental-health risks for these students can be serious. A 2015 study co-authored by Ron Avi Astor, a professor at the University of Southern California, found that California students in military families were more likely to have attempted suicide than students from civilian families, based on the California Healthy Kids Survey given to 390,000 high school students in 2012 and 2013.
Of students from military families, nearly 12 percent answered 鈥測es鈥 when asked if they had attempted suicide in the past 12 months, compared to 7 percent of students with civilian parents.
To help schools develop support systems, Astor leads the Welcoming Practices consortium, a Defense Department initiative of the University of Southern California and five districts: Chula Vista Elementary School, Bonsall Unified, Fallbrook Union High School, Oceanside Unified, and Temecula Valley Unified.
Welcoming Families
Among the recommended strategies are small changes, such as prominent displays of military family photographs, and more complex endeavors, such as creating a welcome center to smooth registration for newly arrived military-dependent students. At Veterans Elementary, a mobile app called WelConnect developed by the Welcoming Practices consortium, helps military families connect to programs and after-school activities run by their school district, the community, and the U.S. military.
While the districts in the consortium are ramping up, Silver Strand Elementary School in the Coronado Unified district has spent more than a decade building a comprehensive support system. The school abuts streets of tidy red-roofed Navy housing, and 80 percent of students are from military families.
鈥淢ost of them, through no fault of their own, come to us behind in academic performance and with gaps in their learning,鈥 Principal Bill Cass said.
Funded by $6.5 million in federal grants over 10 years, the school has hired eight part-time specialists to work intensively with small groups of students on math, reading, and writing in every grade. There also is a full-time military family-life counselor, paid for by the Navy, who knows the students and their families and is available 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
鈥淲e want students to feel, first and foremost, welcome and secure,鈥 Cass said.
As part of its program, Veterans Elementary recently hosted its first 鈥淢ilitary Families Dinner.鈥 Victoria and her mother attended.
Joyce Ayekof said her daughter鈥檚 initial struggles have eased. Victoria said she feels more comfortable, recalling the day her new classmates made a point of welcoming her in the cafeteria.
鈥淚 went to sit down at lunch,鈥 she said, 鈥渁nd all the girls followed me.鈥