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AC hosting several sessions for 2019 No Excuses Culture of Caring Poverty Summit


{p}Amarillo College, a recognized leader in removing barriers of poverty that impede student success, once again will share its strategies with a national gathering but this year, a single summit on the Washington Street Campus will not suffice. (KVII File){/p}

Amarillo College, a recognized leader in removing barriers of poverty that impede student success, once again will share its strategies with a national gathering but this year, a single summit on the Washington Street Campus will not suffice. (KVII File)

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Amarillo College, a recognized leader in removing barriers of poverty that impede student success, once again will share its strategies with a national gathering but this year, a single summit on the Washington Street Campus will not suffice.

To accommodate a growing audience for the No Excuses Culture of Caring Poverty Summit, which was first presented here to a capacity crowd in 2018, AC has scheduled two such presentations this year – May 20-22 and May 23-24.

More than 150 representatives from 59 colleges, universities and institutions in 17 states are registered to attend the summits, which are being presented in association with #RealCollege, a national movement led by the Hope Center for College, Community, and Justice.

All sessions, including presentations by a pair of nationally known experts on poverty issues, will be conducted in the College Union Building.

“We’ve had an overwhelming response from peers at so many schools who are interested in learning more about the great work our faculty and staff have done to help students succeed, so we decided to schedule a second summit this year,” said Cara Crowley, AC’s vice president of strategic initiatives.

“The excitement our Culture of Caring has generated is gratifying,” she said. “We want to accommodate as many as we possibly can.”

Keynote speaker for the opening summit will be Dr. Sara Goldrick-Rab, professor of higher education policy and sociology at Temple University. She also is the founder of the Hope Center for College, Community and Justice, and is best known for her innovative research on food and housing insecurity in higher education.

Dr. Donna Beegle of Communication Across Barriers, a consulting firm dedicated to building poverty-informed communities armed with the tools to break the cycle of poverty in America, will conduct a poverty certification institute to kick off the second summit.

Poverty summit sessions will be conducted on the second floor of the College Union Building. A few of the many topics will be: “Building Your Advocacy and Resource Center,” “Creating a Culture of Caring,” and “Developing Your Systemic Approach to Addressing Poverty Barriers.”

AC’s path to becoming a national leader began when data summits for faculty and staff – and a variety of student focus groups – revealed that poverty, not academics, was the most significant barrier to student success. Students’ concerns about adequate food, housing, transportation, childcare and mental healthcare were weighing them down and preventing greater academic progress.

So AC adopted a Culture of Caring and launched a unique and ambitious No Excuses Poverty Initiative to connect first-generation and/or academically underprepared students with social services structured to help them overcome barriers to success.

The College prioritized accelerated learning, predictive analytics and wraparound social services. AC redesigned developmental education and incorporated the courses into pathways while reconfiguring most courses from 16 down to eight weeks.

Over the past six years, AC has opened a counseling center, a legal aid clinic, a career and employment center, and a childcare center. The college also launched an Advocacy and Resource Center, which houses a food pantry and connects students with social services provided by more than 60 local nonprofits.

Since the inception of the No Excuses Poverty Initiative, AC has recorded steady gains in A-to-C pass rates and fall-to-fall retention, three-year graduation and transfer rates, percentage of students who attend full time, and more.

As AC’s gains outpaced those being recorded nationally, higher education took notice. The No Excuses Poverty Initiative first garnered national acclaim in 2017 when it captured a prestigious Bellwether Award.

In 2018, AC’s systemic approach to accommodating low-income students was detailed in the May 30 issue of The Atlantic. It was further expounded upon in the April 12, 2019 issue of The Chronicle of Higher Education.

Also, earlier this year, AC was named a co-recipient of Achieving the Dream’s Leah Meyer Austin Award, a significant national accolade contingent upon measurable improvements in student outcomes.

“It is an honor to showcase the work we are doing to break down barriers between poverty and education,” Dr. Russell Lowery-Hart, president of Amarillo College, said. “In striving to increase educational access and simultaneously strengthen our community, the faculty and staff here have positioned the College as a national leader, and sharing what we’ve learned is truly an honor.”

Colleges, universities and organizations with personnel registered to attend AC’s No Excuses Culture of Caring Poverty Summit are: Achieving the Dream, Alvin Community College, Bellevue College, Blinn College, Borough of Manhattan Community College/CUNY, Broward College, Chattanooga State Community College, Columbus State Community College, Communities Foundation of Texas, Cuyahoga Community College, Dallas County Community College District, Del Mar College, Eastfield College, El Paso Community College, Fort Worth Catholic Charities, Germanna Community College, Greater Texas Foundation, Harper College, Hill College, Hocking College, Howard College, Lone Star College, Maricopa Community Colleges, McLennan Community College, Mountain Empire Community College, Navarro College, Northeast Wisconsin Technical College, Northern New Mexico College, Northern Virginia Community College, North Central Texas College, North Texas Community College Consortium, Odessa College, Our Lady of the Lake, Palo Alto College, Panola College, Paris Junior College, Pima Community College, Roscoe Collegiate ISD, San Jacinto College, Seward County Community College, St. Petersburg College, Tarrant County College, Temple College, Texas Education Grantmakers Advocacy Consortium, Texas Southmost College, Texas State Technical College, Trellis Foundation, Trinity Valley Community College, Tulsa Community College, University of Denver, Utah Valley University, Vernon College, Virginia Community College System, Wake Technical Community College, Weatherford College, Western Technical College, West Texas A&M University; and Workforce Solutions of West Central Texas.

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