Sunday, January 25, 2009

No Cheese Sandwiches!

Mothers from Wilson Middle School in Albuquerque have found their voice in the civic process. Fighting a controversial measure that singles out students living in poverty, the mothers as they are affectionately called, are mobilizing in opposition to the existing school lunch policy. Under current district policy, students with a delinquent lunch account are offered a cheese sandwich, a beverage and a fruit or vegetable.  Albuquerque Public Schools high school students can charge up to two meals, middle school students up to five, and elementary students up to 10 before they receive the alternate meal.  Opponents to the policy say it unfairly penalizes students for parent transgressions.    

Parent involvement in school policy is not that uncommon.  For generations, PTA groups have shaped district-level policy. However, strong PTA groups usually reside in well-funded, economically advantaged neighborhoods. Wilson has struggled with parent involvement in a school district where approximately 98% of the student population is living at or below the poverty line. 

What makes the mothers from Wilson Middle School so unique is that they are finding their civic voice for the first time. Through the Elev8 NM initiative, an initiative of the New Mexico Community Foundation, parents at Wilson are given basic skills to become strong advocates for their students.  Parents learn basic parenting skills, develop employability skills and are trained in the art of community organizing.  Program data suggests that their parent involvement efforts are paying off.  Wilson Middle School has grown their parent involvement component significantly.  There are currently 84 parents who volunteer at Wilson, which has a population of roughly 500 students.  Research demonstrates that parental involvement is one of the greatest indicators of student success.

Close to 1000 signatures from community members and students have been collected by the mothers in their first major community mobilizing effort.  They've followed this up by attending every APS School Board meeting since January 5th to get the Cheese Sandwich policy repealed.  Many of them had never set foot in an official meeting before.  But, here they were in unified opposition to a policy that directly impacts their families.   

On Monday, the mothers will see the impact of their efforts.  The APS School Board convenes on January 26th to see if a compromise to the controversial policy can be reached.  However, a large victory has already been won.  The muted voices of the mothers now have timbre and resonance.  They have a newfound confidence that they can be change agents in their schools and in their communities and will use this confidence to fight injustice in the neighborhood.    





  

          

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