Cornelius Elementary’s Early School Success

Cornelius Elementary’s Early School Success

With the hint of an autumn chill in the air, Cornelius Elementary School and Children’s Institute kicked off a Learning Tour on October 1, eager to showcase how their partnership is strengthening early learning for children and enhancing teaching practices for educators in Forest Grove, OR.  

The Learning Tour was a unique opportunity for Oregon policymakers, school district administrators, funders, and state agencies to see firsthand how Children’s Institute’s Early School Sucess initiative collaborates with school communities. 

Attendees began to stream in just ahead of the event’s start time, finding themselves in an inviting space as they huddled together in the school’s library. 

Kali Thorne Ladd, CEO of Children’s Institute, opened the tour with an inspiring message and commitment to collaboration with the early childhood and K-12 education systems, and state agencies.  

 “We want to be that middle of the wheel that helps move things forward,” she said. “We are proudly a statewide organization, and we take that very seriously to ensure that both urban and rural communities have access to the supports and resources they need to thrive.” 

Expanding Preschool through Early School Success 

In 2015, Children’s Institute worked with early childhood partners and advocates to develop and successfully pass legislation for Preschool Promise. In the years following, Children’s Institute developed the Early School Success initiative, which launched in 2019 with a focus on supporting preschool expansion in school districts across Oregon.

Preschool Promise is a mixed delivery program, meaning that community-based organizations, family care providers, and school districts can offer Preschool Promise to families at 200 percent or below the Federal Poverty Level. School districts provide 33 percent of Preschool Promise programs, making them the largest provider of the state’s publicly funded preschool, outside of Head Start.  

Children’s Institute’s ESS model helps school districts build quality preschool programming and align their preschool programs to the early grades, through grade 5. Forest Grove was one of the first school districts to receive an ESS grant. Since partnering with Children’s Institute, the district has doubled its preschool classrooms.

Bilingual Biliteracy Focus 

Cornelius Elementary is a dual language school, where all students learn in both Spanish and English. The school has embraced a biliteracy approach starting in preschool, with a focus on native language literacy and gradually introducing a second language. This ensures that students develop literacy skills in both languages.  

Data collected by the school in 2023-2024 shows significant growth in both math and literacy among students, demonstrating how biliteracy reinforces children’s strengths and promotes academic success. 

Hover over image and click arrows to see literacy and math data.

An Inside Look at Cornelius Elementary  

With a guide, small groups of attendees ventured through the halls to see the preschool and elementary grade classrooms in action. Curious eyes investigated as new faces entered the room. But mostly, children were deeply engaged in learning.

As the classroom tours concluded, groups reconnected in the library for lunch and were joined by 4th and 5th graders excited to share about themselves and their school. 

Progress on Early Education 

The Learning Tour at Cornelius Elementary provided a comprehensive look at how Children’s Institute is helping to make progress in Oregon’s early education system, reinforcing the need for continued support and investment in early childhood education to ensure that all children in Oregon have the love, care, and education they need to thrive. 

It also demonstrated how ESS is working with school communities to strengthen classroom practices, align and improve instruction, support joyful learning environments and family engagement, and shift funding to prioritize the foundational early years of a child’s life.

Special Thanks

We want to extend gratitude to Cornelius Elementary School staff for hosting this event with us and being a stellar ESS partner. We also want to thank everyone in the room who joined the Learning Tour, including Forest Grove Superintendent, Dr. Suzanne West; Oregon State representatives and elected officials; folks from the Oregon Department of Education, and Oregon Department of Early Learning and Care; funders, and other esteemed colleagues. Thank you for your dedication to making sure Oregon kids have quality early learning and care, and educators have the support they need.  

Early School Success Leadership Camp 2023

Early School Success Leadership Camp 2023

Temps soared above 100 degrees on August 14 as school teams from four Early School Success (ESS) districts spent the day exploring change ideas and making plans for the new school year.

At the Northwest Regional Education Service District in Hillsboro, more than 30 educators gathered for the Early School Success (ESS) Summer Leadership Camp. The camp, the first of its kind offered by Children’s Institute, created a space to learn about the nuts and bolts of creating change at the school and district levels.

School teams from Beaverton, St. Helens, Forest Grove, and Lincoln County school districts attended the leadership camp and participate continually in ESS.

Erin Lolich, who will oversee ESS starting September 1 as the director of school-based initiatives, said she wants school teams and principals to start the year with a strong understanding of improvement science and aligning preschool and elementary school systems.

“We want the best of what preschool and elementary school have to offer, and we want those learning experiences to be aligned,” she said. “To do that, we need to bring people together to explore what that looks like, practice decision making, and explore change ideas for their school community.”

“Improvement science is like a journey, it’s a framework we use to help change systems,” said Daniel Ramirez, senior improvement advisor for Community Design Partners, a long time CI partner for Early School Success. “It’s not necessarily a linear process. It can be very cyclical, but it keeps teams moving forward.”

This image shows Daniel Ramirez giving a presentation at ESS Leadership Camp.
The improvement process starts by defining problems. School teams explore how the existing system creates those problems, and then work to identify changes that will solve them. From there, changes need to be tested and evaluated for effectiveness. Once something is working, it needs to spread to other classrooms or schools.

The process sounds simple but takes time and intentionality.

Ramirez reminded educators that it’s possible to improve systems. “They can be redesigned,” he said. “But let’s remember that all change is not an improvement.”

This image shows a smiling group of CI Staff members standing in a line.
For a student, improvement and alignment can look like making sure the transition from kindergarten to first grade is smooth. “In a school with a new principal and for a student with a new teacher, it’s important we consider how students experience change,” Lolich said. “They need to know what they can count on when they come to school.”

District teams talked about bright spots and what they were looking forward to this fall.

In Beaverton, Superintendent Gus Balderas has committed to continued preschool expansion throughout the district. In Lincoln County, school leaders are working to locate area preschools inside school buildings.

This image shows a group of ESS participants from Beaverton School District.
The St. Helens team has gotten started on aligning curriculum from preschool through fifth grade.
This image shows a group of participants from the St. Helens School District.
The Forest Grove team discussed how to create a great learning environment for kids by focusing on social and emotional health.

“Social emotional work is so important,” said Rogelio Martinez, principal at Fern Hill Elementary in Forest Grove. “But doing it without a focus on race, culture, and ethnicity is white supremacy with a hug.”

 

This image shows a group of ESS participants from Forest School District.
Attention to identity and belonging was a theme for the day. “Exploring these are central to the work and key for educators as they work with children,” Lolich said.

In Beaverton, the power of play and using loose parts – a wide array of building and craft materials – is helping teachers and school leaders be more culturally responsive.

“Kids, parents, and teachers all have opportunities to learn and internalize the power of play,” said Monique Singleton, principal at Vose Elementary. “Parents learn to engage with their kids in new ways, teachers generate new ideas for instruction, and kids can better explore complex ideas like racism.”

Ellen Arnold, the assistant principal at Vose Elementary, said cultural responsiveness includes finding new ways to explore storytelling in new and dynamic ways. “We’ve introduced these ideas in our school,” she said, “now we need to grow opportunities for people to use it.”

“Prioritizing student identity and voice helps kids come to conclusions about things where using words might be more difficult,” Singleton said. “Play helps get to a deeper level of understanding, and stories create connection.”

That’s true for kids and adults.

Throughout the leadership camp, educators shared stories and perspectives with each other that explored identity, collaboration, and psychological safety. In some ways it all adds up to what Lolich described as “the art of teaming,” adults pulling together to reshape their school communities in ways that are best for young kids.

Ultimately, that’s what ESS is all about.

Earl Boyles Elementary Engages Parents From Linguistically Diverse Communities

Earl Boyles Elementary Engages Parents From Linguistically Diverse Communities

Earl Boyles Elementary Engages Parents From Linguistically Diverse Communities

Over the past few weeks, we have examined on our blog and podcast the challenges and opportunities of educating dual language and English language learners and highlighted the dual language Preschool Promise classes offered at Echo Shaw Elementary School in the Forest Grove School District. Alongside questions of how to support children who speak a home language other than English, schools with linguistically diverse student populations also grapple with how to engage parents who speak languages other than English.

With over 30 home languages spoken in their school, Earl Boyles Elementary School in Southeast Portland works hard to reach out to all parents. Last month, for example, the school hosted orientation meetings to familiarize parents with the standards-based report cards that were sent home on the first of February.

Rather than hosting just one event in English with translators available for parents who needed the service, Earl Boyles hosted three different orientation sessions in English, Spanish, and Chinese. Interpreters first attended the English orientation so that they had a clear sense of the goals and structure of the orientation and would be able to run sessions in their native languages rather than translating from English during their meetings.

District interpreter Yahaira Meza-Lopez observed that during the Spanish language orientation, parents were more comfortable asking questions and participating than they generally seemed in meetings conducted in English with interpretation. This was evident in the interactions between the parents, who participated in partner conversations and small group activities, asked questions of Principal Ericka Guynes, and laughed and joked with each other and school staff during the meeting. Following the explanations of how to interpret the report cards, Principal Guynes provided suggestions for the types of questions parents might want to ask teachers to ensure their children are continuing to progress.

One week after the Spanish language meeting, Chinese interpreters Cindy Banh and Yanshan Chen convened at Earl Boyles with Principal Guynes. Unlike Ms. Meza-Lopez, Ms. Banh and Ms. Chen are not district interpreters, but rather parent volunteers, part of Earl Boyles’ Embajadores de la Comunidad/Community Ambassadors. The group is comprised of bi-lingual parents who have made a significant commitment to connect families to health resources and have received community health worker and other pertinent trainings.

Earl Boyles Elementary Engages Parents From Linguistically Diverse CommunitiesMs. Banh, who has been a volunteer interpreter for three years and who also speaks Vietnamese, has gotten to know the other families in the community well. She frequently receives text messages or phone calls from parents who have questions about materials that have been sent home from school or who want to know if Ms. Banh will be attending particular events at the school.

“The Chinese, if they don’t know English, they don’t want to get involved in programs they don’t understand,” Ms. Chen explained. But her presence makes them feel more comfortable. “It feels friendly if you have a friend there and not just strangers who don’t speak Chinese.”

Thanks to the interpretation services provided, parents have been able to participate more easily in school events such as field trips or special occasions within the classroom where they might otherwise have felt out of place. Beyond increasing parental involvement, interpreters have stressed to parents the importance of supporting children in their development of both English and their home languages.

Ms. Banh and Ms. Yanshan, who worked hard to promote the report card orientation among the Chinese speaking community, were disappointed that no parents attended the meeting. They speculated that the timing during Lunar New Year celebrations was inconvenient or that parents already knew how to interpret the report cards. Principal Guynes used the opportunity to check in with the interpreters about other events that might be more useful to the community. It became clear as the three women discussed the needs of parents that there is no one-size-fits-all approach to community building within a school as diverse as Earl Boyles. The school remains committed to the work, though, and to ensuring that all families feel welcome and supported.

Echo Shaw Prepares Children for Kindergarten in Two Languages

Echo Shaw Prepares Children for Kindergarten in Two Languages

Echo Shaw Prepares Children for Kindergarten in Two Languages

 Echo Shaw’s full-day preschool teacher, Cesiah Vega Lopez, gets her students organized in the gym.

Five years ago, educators at Echo Shaw Elementary School, 24 miles west of Portland, worried their students would be overwhelmed by the state’s new, more intellectually challenging academic standards.

The Common Core standards would expect children to write more and master advanced vocabulary, multiplication, fractions, and linear formulas at a younger age. Kindergarteners used to learn about sides and corners of shapes, but now they’d be talking about vertices and angles.

Nine in ten of Echo Shaw’s students, nearly all Latino, lived in low-income households, and two-thirds of them were learning English as their second language. Most showed up in kindergarten already behind.

“At some point you get exhausted trying to fill these (achievement) gaps at third and fourth grade,” says Perla Rodriguez, Echo Shaw’s principal since 2012. “This wasn’t working for us.”

So Rodriguez and her staff gave their students one big advantage—an earlier start. They launched a half-day preschool class.

Today, Echo Shaw serves 37 4-year-olds in half-day and full-day Preschool Promise classes, a state program for students from low-income homes. Most of them will enter kindergarten on the cusp of reading or actually reading, says Rodriguez. And because Echo Shaw is a dual language school, teaching 430 students up through grade eight in both English and Spanish, its preschoolers show up in kindergarten speaking two languages.

Echo Shaw, which sits on the edge of the small town of Cornelius, ranks among a small, but growing number of Oregon public schools—many of them serving high proportions of children from low-income families—who have found innovative ways to offer preschool. The Children’s Institute has helped two elementary schools—Earl Boyles in East Portland and Yoncalla in the hills south of Eugene—launch early learning programs over the last seven years through its Early Works program. Six years ago, the Coquille School District on Oregon’s coast opened its Lincoln Early Learning Center, which now includes two half-day preschool classes, a Head Start class, and an Early Head Start class for 2- and 3-year-olds.

Leaders in all of these schools know early education better prepares children for kindergarten and school success and can prevent the achievement gap that so often leaves kids from low-income families behind. What’s more, investing early in education can reduce the costs of remediation and school failure.

State readiness tests show Echo Shaw’s students on average are better prepared for kindergarten than children elsewhere in the district and state, says John O’Neill, interim superintendent of the 6,000-student Forest Grove School District, which encompasses 10 schools, including Echo Shaw.

“This speaks to not only knowing the academic skills, but also the social emotional skills that set them up for school success day one of kindergarten,” he says. In addition, he says, offering preschool in a school district “begins a partnership earlier in a child’s career between the home and the school.”

Echo Shaw Prepares Children for Kindergarten in Two LanguagesEcho Shaw parents say the preschool has given their children social and academic skills they are hard-pressed to teach at home with demands of work and family. Jesus Narnajo Gallardo, 32, volunteers in the class and sees his son, Daniel, thriving under the structure. Without this class, the father says, “it would be either a cell phone or the TV that would be teaching him.”

Veronica Rodriguez Jimenez, 39, says her son, Jacob, is learning to share. “He is more social,” she says. “He tries to interact with the                                                          Jesus Narnajo Gallardo and his son Daniel                                    others.” He’s learned English well                                                                                                                                                              enough to help other immigrants                                                                                                                                                            with translating, she says.

Scherise Hernandez, 39, says her 4-year-old daughter, Sady, can write her name, tie her shoes, and “she helps other children.” Sady 

Echo Shaw Prepares Children for Kindergarten in Two Languagesspeaks Spanish at home, says Hernandez, but she “actually gets a lot of English” at school, and she’s speaking it. Without the preschool, says the mother, Sady would probably be spending her time in daycare.

Echo Shaw’s full-day Preschool Promise teacher, Cesiah Vega Lopez, says she sees herself as a facilitator. During “choice time” one January morning, for example, her students spread across the classroom to explore activities they pick—activities designed to develop their small motor skills while exposing them to letters, words, and color, shape, and number concepts. The room has the quiet hum of a busy office as children explore their interests. Dressed in a lacy pink skirt and a   white shirt bearing the words “Cool is being yourself,”                Four-year-old Sady speaks Spanish and English.                    Sady stands with several classmates around a table                                                                                                                        sorting through photographs of themselves. Four children sit at another table stringing beads over pipe cleaners. Nearby, four boys fit colorful plastic cubes together into beams and girders. A brown-haired girl alone at a third table copies the name Peyton on a white board with a black marker.

Student art and posters cover the walls. Books, toys, supplies, and bins of art fill shelves and cabinets. Everywhere there are words in English and Spanish. The light switch is tagged both with its English name and “el interruptor de luz.” The foyer portrays the school’s mascot with the words, “Home of the Eagles,” and “El hogar de las aguilas.” The phrases “We are safe” and “Somos cuidadosos,” stretch over one gym wall.

Echo Shaw Prepares Children for Kindergarten in Two Languages

Everywhere at the dual language school are words in Spanish and English.

Vega Lopez, 30, a licensed teacher now in her second year at Echo Shaw, knows the challenges many of her children face; she was born in Mexico, grew up in Forest Grove and learned English during her middle school years. About half her students speak Spanish at home. She teaches primarily in Spanish on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday and in English on Thursday and Friday. She teaches math in English, but science and social studies in Spanish. Her children are learning letter sounds, number concepts, and how to follow directions, express their feelings and self-regulate. She knows well what they must learn for kindergarten.

“I have the luxury of being able to visit the kindergarten teacher right next door to me,” she says.

Oregon Department of Education test results last year showed Echo Shaw children in grades three through eight performing nearly at state average in math and English. About 40 percent of them exceeded standards compared to about half that many in Oregon schools with similar proportions of minority and economically disadvantaged children. The benefits of preschool have yet to be measured as Echo Shaw’s first preschool graduates just reached third grade this year. But every grade at Echo Shaw is raising expectations for the better prepared students coming up from its preschool, say school leaders.

The dual language program has been so successful that a large number of seventh-graders are ready to take the college-level Advanced Placement Spanish course, says Superintendent O’Neill. “With a strong preschool foundation to work from,” he says, “student outcomes will only be enhanced.”

Rodriguez, the principal, personally knows the power of preschool because it helped shape her and her entire family. She grew up in Ontario, Ore., with parents who migrated from Mexico unable to speak English. She and her brother attended a federally-funded migrant Head Start program, which offered her mother wrap-around services, including driving lessons and a citizenship class. In time, her mother became a Head Start teacher and then director of a Head Start center. Rodriguez went on to earn her bachelor’s degree in bilingual education at Boise State University, her master’s in school administration at Concordia University in Portland, and her doctorate in education leadership at George Fox University in Newberg.

The principal has tapped a variety of funding sources to offer preschool at Echo Shaw. The school used federal migrant student support to pay for its first half-day preschool five years ago, which it expanded to three-quarters of a day in the following year. That meant, though, it could only serve migrant students in its preschool. In the third year, it was able to use both migrant and federal Title I money to offer two half-day preschool classes for all 4-year-olds. For this year and last, the school has used Title I money and support from Preschool Promise to offer a full-day and a half-day class. Last year, nearby Cornelius Elementary also started offering preschool with the help of a Preschool Promise grant. District leaders are exploring how to expand preschool district wide, O’Neill says. “There is definite support to do this,” he says, “but funding is a barrier.”

Rodriguez says she will continue foraging for every funding source she can find to keep her preschool thriving, and she hopes, expanding.

“It is not a silver bullet,” she says, “but I believe the kindergarten readiness we see in our preK students is worth every penny that we have put into it.”

Additional Resources on Preschool Promise
Toward Equitable Achievement in Oregon with Abdikadir Bashir Mohamud

Early Learning Multnomah

Preschool Promise: Quality Preschool for Lane County Kids

Preschool Promise to Help Hundreds, Statesman Journal

Preschool Promise to Help 170 Washington County Children Attend Preschool, Early Learning Washington County