New York welcomes more than 111,000 homeless students, new data

 

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About one in 10 academics in New York City public schools live homeless, a rate that has remained stubbornly for several years.

That means about 111,600 young people ran out of solid housing, according to state knowledge research published Thursday morning. No matter how high that number, advocates fear less is being counted, as distance learning has made schools identify homeless students. .

Data released Thursday showed that about 3,000 fewer young people were left homeless in the 2019-2020 school year than last year, a 2% drop.

In New York City, the maximum number of homeless youth in district and autonomous schools (about 6% and 5%) it doubled in shared accommodation, such as with friends or family, according to the Advocates for Children New York report. Another 30% lived in urban shelters. The remaining five percent, totaling about five thousand 900 young people, has been known as “homeless,” meaning they may be living in cars, parks, transit caravans or abandoned buildings.

“The large scale of homeless reading in New York requires urgent attention,” said Kim Sweet, executive director of Advocates for Children, the nonprofit that drafted the report and provides legal material to students with high needs. “If those young men were yours,” city, it would be bigger than Albany, and their number could soar even higher after the moratorium lift on evictions in the state.

Citizens of New York City have secure protections that oppose evictions until at least the end of the year, however, this does not apply in all cases, and tenants will have to testify in court that they are eligible for such a remedy, THE CITY reported. .

Advocates for Children noted that the number of homeless academics this year could exceed what was reported. The closure of school buildings amid the coronavirus pandemic is hampering the school’s ability to identify adjustments to student housing conditions, authorities said.

This echoes national trends, with fewer academics across the country known as homeless people, according to a recent study.

The pandemic has exacerbated disparities between homeless academics and their hosted peers. Many of these academics did not have reliable access to the Internet or a generation to participate in remote information. Those who do so can be informed in a shared area with several circles of family members.

“Most of the [homeless] families we talked to lived in one or two rooms, with several children, looking to be online at the same time,” said Susan Horwitz, a lawyer at the Legal Aid Society. they don’t have noise-cancelling headphones, they don’t have room to be alone with fewer distractions. “

Living in a homeless shelter, the pandemic made it difficult for Areinny Lacayo, a recent immigrant from Honduras, to get a smart education for her 5-year-old son.

There is no Wi-Fi for citizens of your Bronx shelter, and the cellular service that powers your child’s iPad in the city is patchy, often two or three days a week your child learns at home, their distance categories avoid halfway Sometimes, Lacayo leaves the hostel to collect donations from local churches , but you have to take your child out of the categories because he leaves him alone. Mom: Still relies on Google Translate to translate your child’s homework, which is to learn English as a new language. It’s hard with an unreliable Internet.

Signal challenges remained a challenge for Lacayo that a social employee at the shelter gave him the Wi-Fi password used by staff, but “there are days when the signal fails completely,” he says. On Thursday, your child couldn’t connect to distance categories at all.

“It’s [my] daily life, and it’s complicated right now,” Lacayo said through a translator.

Lacayo’s son uses one of the 350,000 Internet-enabled iPads that the city has distributed to academics, prioritizing academics in transitional housing, and is delivering 100,000 devices to fill the remaining gaps, but Wi-Fi remains a problem.

Such demanding situations mean that fewer homeless academics “show up” to distance courses. The virtual attendance rate for homeless academics is 70% or less in about three hundred schools in the city in the spring. This rate is particularly lower than the average participation rate of 86% across the city during the same period, when participation in a Zoom lesson or a teacher’s reaction to an SMS can be considered simply as “present”.

After increasing pressure, the city pledged to equip all family circle shelter sets with Wi-Fi and also announced that it would temporarily transfer cellular service providers to devices without a forged connection, according to an October announcement. Stressed those shelters, city officials said Wi-Fi wouldn’t be available in all those buildings until the end of the school year.

Since then, Legal Aid has filed a lawsuit, urging the city to complete its Wi-Fi services at all family hostels until January 4, the first day back to school after the winter break.

Mayor Bill de Blasio told reporters this week that the wiring of the shelters “is a notoriously more vital painting and we are engaged, however, it is all that we want to be realistic about the moment and I will leave it like this, because it is a matter of litigation.

Advocates remain involved in students in transitional housing falling more academically. In the 2018-2019 school year, 29% of the city’s homeless students passed state reading tests and 27% passed the math test, nearly 20 percent less than their peers living Homeless students were also more likely to miss school and be suspended, according to an earlier analysis independent of the Budget Office.

The de Blasio administration has committed more resources to homeless students, adding a $ 12 million investment to school aid for those children. It also hired 100 “Bridging The Gap” social staff to serve schools with large numbers of students in transitional housing. Freeze and budget cuts at the Ministry of Education, at least 20 positions committed to helping academics in transitional housing are vacant, according to Advocates For Children.

Advocates for Children is asking the city to ensure that each and every homeless student has the right technology, touches students who do not participate in distance learning more often, and offers in-person categories to the families of homeless students who wish to do so.

This school year, city day care centers, known as Learning Bridges, prioritize seats for homeless students, as well as the youth of some must-have workers. The Department of Education did not say how many homeless youth are enrolled in Learning Bridges.

Following recent building closures across the city, schools will reopen next week for 3K, pre-kindergarten, K-5 and students with the greatest disabilities. As schools, if they can offer more days of in-person learning, the Department of Education is asking principals to start prioritizing vacancies for students with disabilities, and then moving on to other teams of high-need academics, adding homeless youth and students learning English as a new language.

However, the city has not yet established a plan to bring back the best school academics, that all homeless academics in those categories will be informed from a distance at least until early 2021.

“We are committed to offering our homeless students a high-quality education that provides them with the essential supports and resources to fulfill their wishes at each and every level of the process,” said Sarah Casasnovas, spokeswoman for the Department of Education. wrote in a statement. “These scholars continue to set a precedent in this crisis, and we continue to work strongly with advocates like [Advocates for Children] and spouse agencies to provide caring and supportive environments, on-user or remotely.

Chalkbeat is a non-profit news story covering educational replacement in public schools.

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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle and brooklyneagle. com cover Brooklyn 24 hours a day, 7 days a week online and five days a week in print with the slogan “All Brooklyn all the time. “With a history dating back to 1841, the Eagle is New York’s only faithful exclusively in Brooklyn.

© 2020 All Brooklyn Media

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