The dominant assumption behind much current educational policy and practice is that school is the only place where and when children learn. This assumption is wrong. Forty years of steadily accumulating research shows that out-of-school, or “complementary learning” opportunities are major predictors of children’s development, learning, and educational achievement.
The research also indicates that economically and otherwise disadvantaged children are less likely than their more-advantaged peers to have access to these opportunities. This inequity substantially undermines their learning and chances for school success. To solve this problem, we must imagine what the solution would look like.
The Vision: A Continuous,
Comprehensive, Complementary
Learning System
Imagine the following scenario, with the hypothetical student Marcus and his mother Maria.
Marcus is seventeen years old. He lives in a public housing development with his younger sister and his mother, Maria, who makes minimum wage cleaning houses. When she was pregnant with Marcus, Maria went to her community health clinic and told her doctor, “I want to be a better parent than my mother. I want my kids to go to college, but I don't know anybody who went to college. How do I help my kids get there?”
Maria’s doctor referred her to the
local community center, which had
strong partnerships with the health
clinic and the local school district. At
the community center, Maria enrolled
in a parenting class. Although initially
nervous, she liked the instructor and
the strategies she learned for helping
Marcus learn. She began reading to
him and taking him to the children’s
museum. She also received home visits
from educators at the center, who
showed her effective discipline strategies.
The biggest benefit of the center,
she thought, was meeting other parents
to share information, stories, and ambitions
for their children.
When Marcus was almost three, a family liaison from the local school district came to the community center to talk to parents about the importance of pre-kindergarten classes and tell parents about the school where their children would attend kindergarten. “We have the same goal you do to help your kids succeed all the way to college,” she said. After the family liaison’s visit, Maria enrolled Marcus in the center’s Head Start program and began volunteering once a month. The school district’s family liaison became a regular presence, stopping by the center to provide information, answer questions, and refer parents to the school district’s own parenting seminars.
The summer before kindergarten, the family liaison and the school principal led a tour of the local public school and set up a meeting with Maria, Marcus, a staff member from the school’s after-school program, and Marcus’s advisor another teacher who would advise Marcus throughout his elementary school years. Together, they developed a plan for getting Marcus all the way to college. The plan they called it a learning compact explained what each person would do to help Marcus succeed. Every semester for the rest of elementary school, the group would meet to review Marcus’s grades, discuss his progress, and assess whether each person was fulfilling his or her responsibilities.
Maria, who had never had good relationships with her own teachers, quickly warmed to the teachers and other staff. When the principal saw her at the school one morning, he personally invited her to volunteer and she gladly accepted. The principal also told her about the school-based health clinic and Maria began scheduling immunizations and regular visits for Marcus.
After Marcus’s (and Maria’s!)
successful transition to kindergarten,
Marcus thrived in elementary school.
During one of the learning compact
meetings, the after-school director,
who had noticed Marcus’s talent for
singing, encouraged him to sing in the
church choir and helped him apply for
and win a scholarship to a summer arts
program. She and Marcus’s reading
teacher at school also worked together
to help him write songs based on the
books he was reading in class.
Before Marcus moved on to middle school, the learning compact team introduced Marcus and Maria to his new middle school team, a process that was repeated before he entered high school. In eighth grade, the team began discussing Marcus’s goal of becoming a music professor, including how to apply to and succeed in college. They discussed what Marcus could do after school and during the summers to help achieve his goals. Maria also attended a “financial aid” night cosponsored by the school, local universities, and the after-school recreation program.
Now in the spring of twelfth grade, Marcus is ready to graduate and has been accepted with scholarships at four different colleges. With a lifelong network of learning supports in place, his path to college and career is wide open.1
Core Features of a Complementary
Learning System
To access the learning opportunities and a pathway to educational success as described in our story of Marcus and Maria, children like Marcus need a continuous, comprehensive, and complementary learning system, the components of which have a shared vision for learning and educational success. The individual services and programs described above already exist, but parents like Maria may find their high expectations for their children frustrated by their lack of experience in navigating the educational system. A piecemeal approach increases the chances that they will fall through the cracks and will not have access to all of the learning supports necessary to maximize success (for example, after-school and summer programs). In our story, Maria and Marcus found and followed a pathway to college because their community had intentionally created a complementary learning system to connect the existing stepping-stones.
Complementary learning refers to the idea that a systemic approach, which intentionally integrates both school and out-of-school learning supports, can better ensure that all children have the skills they need to succeed in school and in life. As in our story of Maria and Marcus’s community, complementary learning systems require that stakeholders come together to create a system with a set of core features.
1. A commitment to ensuring access to
complementary learning for disadvantaged
children and their families
Currently, disadvantaged children and
their families have less opportunity to
experience complementary learning
than their more-affluent peers. Thus,
they don't experience the rich set of
learning opportunities that the research
suggests is essential to positive learning
and developmental outcomes, thus
further widening achievement gaps. This is
true both for family involvement, where
we see differential patterns in involvement
based on socio-economic factors
as well as educator outreach, and for
access and participation in after-school
and summer learning programs, where
we see differences in participation
based on socio-economic status.
2. A systemic approach to supporting the
role of families in learning.
Parents who are involved early and
throughout the school years have children
who are more likely to enter
school ready to succeed and to graduate
and go to college. Further, families
play a critical role in accessing and sustaining
participation in a network of
quality learning supports. Many families
lack the social and political capital necessary
even to know about learning
opportunities for their children, let
alone make to good choices among
these opportunities. Thus, a systemic
approach to family involvement is one
that helps families understand the
value of continuous learning of all
kinds and offers the network of supports
necessary for that learning.
3. Access to an array of quality comprehensive
and complementary supports
from birth through adolescence.
Complementary learning starts at birth
and continues through adolescence.
Home visiting and early childhood programs
set children on a path to school
readiness; participation in after-school
and summer learning programs affords
children and youth access to crucial
developmental supports and opportunities
that prepare them for later
success in life. Health and economic
supports are also necessary precursors
to children’s being prepared to learn.
Throughout the child’s development,
families remain a core out-of-school
learning support that should interface
with all others.
4. Focus on a range of academic, social,
and behavior skills.
From birth through adolescence,
access to an array of out-of-school
learning supports promotes learning
both directly and indirectly, building
skills and knowledge as well as the
conditions for learning (for example,
motivation and engagement, social
skills, and health). They help to address
achievement gaps and the challenges
that living in poverty pose for children’s
educational and life outcomes and
build the skills they need to become
successful citizens, parents, and workers.
5. Alignment and connection of out-ofschool
supports to schools and to each
other to maximize learning and developmental
outcomes.
Across a child’s development, aligned
and connected supports aid important
educational transitions and ensure that
children and youth get on and stay on
pathways to learning and life success.
Key features of alignment include:
6. Recognition that there are multiple
ways by which localized complementary
learning approaches can be
implemented.
Approaches to implementing complementary
learning can and should
vary depending on the needs and
resources of any given community.
Leadership for complementary learning
can be housed within a school, in a
community-based organization, or
across a community in the form of
education councils, but efforts to
develop complementary learning need
to be co-constructed among all educators
and providers in a community.
The Federal Role in
Out-of-School Learning
At the federal level, policies and legislation play an important role in enabling such complementary learning efforts. Yet historically, and moving forward, the work of implementing out-of-school learning has been and will continue to be the responsibility of local schools, districts, and communities, with money from disparate funding streams passing through the states to them.
Thus, the role of the federal government in complementary learning is not to implement programs, but rather to enable local innovation, show leadership, support accountability and quality, and use other legislative and regulatory tools to ensure that complementary learning occurs locally. Some recent federal legislation, such as the Full-Service Community Schools Act and the proposed Education Begins at Home (EBAH) Act, enables states and communities to implement complementary learning efforts that best suit their local needs.
The Need for a New Era
of Federal Leadership
With the passage of the historic
Elementary and Secondary Education
Act (ESEA) of 1965, the President and
Congress declared that it was in the
national interest for the federal government
to take on national educational
leadership and funding roles to ensure
equal educational opportunity for disadvantaged
children (Jennings 2001).
As the name of the act indicates, the
assumption was that elementary and
secondary schools, unassisted, would
manage to level the playing field for
disadvantaged children. But more
than forty years of research since ESEA
confirms that America will not achieve
its national goals of equal educational
opportunity, leaving no child behind, or
preparing its workforce and citizenry
for twenty-first-century challenges without
addressing the inequities in out-ofschool
learning opportunities as a major
component of education reform.
As in 1965, national leaders should use the bully pulpit, as well as federal leverage and funding, to enable states, counties, and communities to make the shift toward more complementary learning. This leadership can capitalize on growing national, state, and local momentum and readiness to shift to a broader education reform strategy that redefines what learning is, who enables it, and when and where it takes place. Whether they describe it as a “broader, bolder approach,” “a new day for learning,” or comprehensive, extended, or complementary learning, numerous educational organizations, nonprofit and professional groups, elected officials, and business and citizen groups are calling for inclusion of these broader educational opportunities and supports.
Investing in a Systemic and
Aligned Approach to Learning
The recommendations that follow are
intended to move the current federal
role in out-of-school learning from
investments in individual out-of-school
supports to investments in supports
that are networked and aligned with
schools and then to a full vision of
complementary learning, which calls
for seamless delivery of comprehensive
learning and developmental supports
across the day, across the year, and
across a child’s development from birth
through adolescence.
Collectively, these five recommendations comprise the federal role in developing, implementing, and testing a national strategy for complementary learning. They lead to a final recommendation: drafting and passage of the Pathways to Educational Success Act of 2009, confirming federal leadership and support for a new era of educational innovation and reform.
1. Use federal leadership, the bully pulpit, funding, and leverage to promote equitable out-of-school learning opportunities and integrate them into the center of the education reform discussion; enact and fully fund legislation that will enable states and communities to implement more continuous, aligned, and systemic efforts to educate all children.
Using its leadership role, the federal government can shift the national mindset about where and how children learn toward an understanding that schools are a core, but not sole, contributor to educational success. Federal leadership that puts the national spotlight on the importance of out-ofschool learning and its alignment with schools, that supports innovation in the areas of learning and accountability, and that builds a long-term strategy to achieve complementary learning will, in turn, leverage sustainable state and local change.
Immediate action such as the creation of a high-level position in the U.S. Department of Education with responsibility for all out-of-school learning and its alignment with schools would signal the importance of this change. New legislation and modifications of No Child Left Behind (NCLB) allowing flexibility in the use of Title I, Supplemental Educational Services (SES), and other funding streams for complementary learning services and linkages is also necessary. In addition, new and existing higher-education legislation should take into account both immediate and longer-term needs for professional development for all those involved in complementary learning, including teachers, administrators, and after-school and summer-learning providers.
2. Promote innovation to implement continuous, comprehensive, complementary learning systems at the local level.
The types of changes envisioned here will require the federal government not just to serve as regulator and agent of accountability, but also to stimulate and fund innovation. Marginal change is insufficient to enable states and communities to make the necessary fundamental transformations in how we define and organize learning. Arguing that the research and development infrastructure for school improvement is currently weak and that this constitutes a case of “market failure for educational innovation,” Anthony Bryk and Louis Gomez (2008) recommend that innovations be co-developed by interdisciplinary researchers, practitioners, and social entrepreneurs with a commitment to continuous improvement (p. 182). They suggest that innovations must be co-developed by researchers and practitioners within a continuous-improvement approach.
Both researchers and policymakers applaud the emphasis on research-based educational policy and programs. However, they are increasingly recognizing the limits of existing research alone to solve our most pressing educational problems and are calling on the government to fund innovative new approaches to ensuring that many more children reach proficiency (Joftus 2008). In order to promote innovation to implement continuous, comprehensive, complementary learning systems at the local level, we recommend that the federal government do the following.
Develop a strategic national
research, development, and innovation
agenda and leverage private
and philanthropic dollars, as well
as public funding, to support it.3. Support accountability across all components of a complementary learning system, including schools and out-of-school learning supports.
Accountability is now part of American education. The passage of NCLB in 2001 brought a clear emphasis on outcomes, explicit requirements for standards and assessment systems, and more transparent accountability. In doing so, it significantly raised expectations for states, local education agencies, and schools: all schools are now expected to meet or exceed state standards in reading and math by 2014.
While there has been much debate about the merits of NCLB as an education reform strategy, there is some consensus that its emphasis on accountability which, in the end, revealed that many schools were failing to meet adequate yearly progress standards has been instrumental in shaping the realization that “schools can't do it alone.” In that sense, NCLB has contributed to current thinking about the importance of out-of-school learning as complementary to schoolimprovement strategies. Thus, any new efforts to reform education must be coupled with efforts to reform and strengthen not shy away from an accountability system that can target improvement strategies to specific schools and districts, as well as identify the localized network of out-of-school supports that can best complement those schools and districts.
Though the federal role in integrated local data systems is extremely limited, the federal government could show leadership in this area by supporting the development of integrated data systems as part of its investments in research, demonstration, and innovation sites. Mechanisms that bring multiple community stakeholders together for regular progress updates and action planning already exist (see, for example, McLaughlin & O’Brien- Strain 2008). These should be examined and scaled to support better integration of data in places attempting to implement complementary learning.
4. Use legislative and policy tools to enable complementary learning.
Sustaining investment in after-school, summer learning, and family involvement is vital to the success of the federal role in supporting complementary learning. But there are several other ways to be more intentional about support. The federal government could make it easier to create linkages and leverage its investments to partner with others to support programs and innovation, thus facilitating the creation of complementary learning systems. We recommend a combination of some realignment of existing funding and the creation of new sources of funding, both of which would have an impact at the federal, state, and local levels.
Specifically, we recommend that the federal role include the following aspects:
5. Explore and build public-private- nonprofit partnerships to scale and assure the quality of out-of-school supports.
Over the past fifty years of federal
investment in out-of-school learning
supports, public-private partnerships
have played a small but important role
in augmenting and leveraging federal
investments to support quality. For
example, when the 21st CCLC grants
program was established, the Charles
Stewart Mott Foundation seized the
opportunity to partner with the U.S.
Department of Education. The partnership
ensured that elements that the
government could not support at the
time technical assistance, public will,
seeding evaluation, promising practices,
policy development, and communication
were supported as needed to
ensure the sustainability and expansion
of the grants program.
While Mott’s partnership efforts may be exceptional, this kind of private support of public investments will be needed to ensure equitable access to quality complementary learning opportunities. To develop such partnerships, we recommend that the federal government take the following actions:
Leading a New Era of
Innovation and Education
Reform: Proposing the
Pathways to Educational
Success Act
Research shows that out-of-school learning contributes to and, in fact, is necessary for positive learning and developmental outcomes. It is time, therefore, for the federal government to innovate and experiment with extended learning opportunities and time to ensure that all children are on a pathway to success, defined as high school completion and post-secondary training so that they have the skills necessary to succeed in the twentyfirst century.
We acknowledge that some federal efforts to do so are already under way, such as the new Full Service Community Schools Act and the Time for Innovation Matters in Education (TIME) Act. But we conclude that these are not sufficient to push complementary learning from the shallows into the mainstream of education reform.
Thus, our final recommendation is to establish a new federal education policy the Pathways to Educational Success Act of 2009 which would enable districts and schools to work with communities to develop and test new local, complementary learning systems that offer the elements that research indicates are necessary for children to succeed, within a framework of shared accountability for better outcomes.
The new legislation should require an early, continuous, comprehensive, and complementary learning approach implemented by local districts in partnership with community-based and faith-based organizations and should include the following provisions:
This national strategy for complementary learning will require support from multiple stakeholders at the federal, state, and local levels, including educators, teachers, early-care providers, after-school and summer learning providers, and families. We offer ourframework and recommendations to inform these stakeholders’ efforts to redesign our current education system to include not only excellent schools but also the provision of high-quality complementary learning supports, particularly for disadvantaged children and youth. Four decades of consistent research evidence makes clear that failure to redefine learning and where and when it takes place and to follow up with innovations that enable communities to move to a complementary learning approach will prevent the country from reaching its national goal of educating all children.