Gold in Rio, but we don’t value kids’ mettle–September 23, 2016

 

Gold in Rio, but we don’t value kids’ mettle

Olympic and Paralympic fever may have subsided but two local sports heroes have their sights trained on an altogether different finish line: Olympian Bruce Baumgartner and Steelers legend Franco Harris.

As a four-time Olympic medalist, Baumgartner knows that it doesn’t just take the drive and discipline of an athlete to win gold, but also the support of parents, communities and the entire nation to cheer them on.

But elite athletes, he explains, are growing more concerned about losing the academic medal count.

“In Rio, America’s 121 medals vastly outpaced second-place China. However, our children’s 2012 international academic scores ranked 35th in math and 27th in science,” wrote Baumgartner, president of USA Wrestling and director of athletics at Edinboro University of Pennsylvania, in a recent op-ed published Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and the Erie Times.

High quality pre-k, he continues, sets up toddlers for kindergarten “with the pre-math, pre-reading and social/emotional skills needed to reach their full potential.”

“Unfortunately, here in Pennsylvania access to quality pre-kindergarten is limited,” Baumgartner laments.

“Among the 170,000 Pennsylvania 3- and 4-year-olds living in lower-income households, and therefore at greatest risk of academic failure, nearly 70 percent lack access to quality publicly funded early-childhood programs each year. This represents missed opportunities for 120,000 young children annually.”

Those dismal international academic rankings mean squandered potential.

“In athletic terms, it’s as if Kyle Snyder had never taken to the mat, or Simone Biles had never chalked her hands for the balance beam.”

Franco Harris on the same team

Franco Harris, Board Chair of the Pittsburgh Promise, an organization that works to boost educational outcomes, believes in the same academic game plan for Pennsylvania and wrote a letter to the Post Gazette, published this week.

“He poses a truly Olympian idea: Invest more in quality education for students to greatly improve the chances for their success at the outset of their lives,” wrote the four-time Super Bowl champion, urging action.

“If our leaders in government and business would adopt such proposals to fund a game plan to enhance and expand a quality-driven prekindergarten plan for the children of Western Pennsylvania, educational interventions would conceivably be less necessary.”

As a founding member of the Pre-K for PA campaign, a non-partisan coalition dedicated to securing high-quality pre-k to every at-risk youth in Pennsylvania and lowering the current high cost barriers for middle-class families, PCCY routinely shares updates of new developments through social media.

As momentum for Pre-K for PA continues to build, we look forward to bringing you passionate voices from across the state speaking on behalf of children.

Join Pre-K for PA today and help make it happen!

        

 

NEXT FRIDAY, join PCCY and Mayor Jim Kenney at City Hall for a special Rally For Arts Education at 5pm, following a rally in support of Arts Ed at 4! 

RALLY FOR ARTS ED!

 

“There has never been the intent with the adoption of this policy to shame or embarrass a child.”  Canon-McMillan school district’s superintendent, of a policy that left a high schooler hungry, shamed and crying.

READ: Disgusted cafeteria worker quits after ‘lunch shaming’

 

Could your school use a $5k ARTS GRANT? PCCY is now accepting applications for innovative creative, performing and digital arts! The Picasso Project supports under-resourced Philly schools through vital arts education mini-grants.

APPLY FOR AN ARTS GRANT

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“As is the case in most major moral and legal matters in this nation’s history, the courts must intercede. Our children and the future of our nation depend on it.”  Senator Vincent J. Hughes, in response to the fair education lawsuit currently being considered by the PA Supreme Court.   READ Courts Must Intercede