Historical Background "Education in our country is social welfare comparable to Hurricane Katrina One of the challenges we face in this country is that our system is designed to basically make children fail "Jeffrey Canada said: a speech at the Social Justice Leadership Conference (Newport, 2011), to Canada, publicize the problems confronted by the country's society. There is the ability to say, but he does something not just talking.
These are the questions I have been trying to answer in my report for over 10 years. My first book "Anytime Anywhere" is based on the work of Jeffrey Canada, the founder of the Harlem Children's Zone, and we are looking into how the community affects the outcomes of children in particular in the neighborhood I will. Concentrated poverty limits opportunities for children. In my second book, "How Children Succeed", I will look at the challenges of disadvantaged children from a different perspective. Skill and ability to develop (or not develop) as a child.
Geoffrey Canada, Chairman of the Nonprofit Harlem Children's Zone and Chief Investor of Harlem Children's Zone, Stanley Druckenmiller, sent a guest lecture from the Robertson Scholar Leadership Program to a group. They emphasized the weakness of US social policy spending and warned the audience that no economic crisis should be present in any reform.
Please read all Paul Tough before class. Regardless of what you need, Geoffrey Canada requires you to change Harlem and the United States. Boston: Mariner Books, 2009. Read the question: What is the theory of reform behind the Harlem children zone? According to Geoffrey Canada, what is the root cause of poverty? Is his poverty reduction strategy more inclined toward institutional development and decentralization? Why are the political leaders of political parties with a difficult division seeing something that is worthy of praise for Canada's reform efforts?
Jeffrey Canada - Canada is an educator, writer and activist. From 1990 to 2014 as president of the Harlem child district, Canada actively focused on the educational background of local youth and instructed the program to ensure their success. You may admit Canada from the character introduced in the documentary 'Waiting for Superman'. Jose Octavio Rivas, Jr. - Rivas is a high school teacher in the Lenox school district of California, mainly teaching STEM courses to ethnic minority students with high poverty rate. In his efforts, Rivas receives more than $ 150,000 in funds and promises to help his students succeed by preparing to become an engineer. Rivas is the next point of our 2016 Escalante - Gladi Las Best Education Award.