Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Harlem Agency Hopes to End Poverty Cycle - 'Baby College' Teaches Parents Child-Rearing Skills


By BILL WEIR and TRACEY MARX
March 21, 2009—


As the nation roils with fear of poverty and political debates over
socialization and the free market, there is one man who has been
wading through that thicket for years. And he may have found a "cure"
for poverty.

His name is Geoffrey Canada. He was raised in New York City by a
single mom who provided enough for him to earn a master's degree in
education from Harvard before he went on to work as an urban do-gooder.

But for years, no matter how much he did, he saw very little good.

Canada, 57, has been working at the Harlem Children's Zone, which
includes two charter schools, for more than 20 years. His main goal
has been to turn children of tough inner-city neighborhoods into
college-bound citizens. He does it by getting to those kids when they
are still in the womb and well before they ever hear a discouraging
word or feel a slap of anger.

Three out of four kids are born into poverty in New York City's Harlem
neighborhood, according to a report from the Children's Defense Fund.
And most stay there, despite expensive social programs. This cycle
confounded Canada, until his wife got pregnant 11 years ago and he had
an epiphany.

"I really started thinking about how little I knew about early brain
development," said Canada, president and chief executive of the Harlem
Children's Zone.

Canada became a new dad right around the time of the "Baby Einstein"
boom. Bookstores were filled with new science theories showing that a
toddler's brain is like a sponge.

"That brain is receptive from birth and you, as the parent, have to be
putting in valuable information," he explained. "You have to be
talking, you have to be singing, you have to be playing with this
child, you have to read to this child."

One study by the American Educator, the professional journal of the
American Federation of Teachers, found that by the age of 3, children
of upper-class parents hear about 30 million words, most of them
encouraging, while children of parents on welfare hear only 10 million
words, most of them harsh and scolding.

Parents from the suburbs swarmed bookstores, clamoring to get their
children exposed to more words, but the people of Harlem were using a
style of parenting handed down since the days of slavery.


Canada said Harlem parents were preparing children to be quiet, well
mannered and subservient because they thought those were the kids who
got jobs. And a lot of that teaching included hitting the child.

"We had to go to parents and say, 'You know what; first of all, you
are spending all of your time trying to beat this child into
submission,'" said Canada.

He tried to tell parents that kids are just being kids, testing limits
and learning by touch and sound.

"They're not being oppositional, they're called being 2," he said.

While the Harlem Children's Zone already had clinics and charter
schools, Canada added Baby College to the pipeline. The program
consists of a nine-week series of workshops for parents of children up
to age 3.

To recruit parents, the Zone sends workers into the streets telling
them that they can learn about nutrition, nurturing and discipline.
But in the workshop, they'll also get to share their own experiences
with discipline.

Marilyn Joseph, director of Baby College, said most parents use what
she calls the P-words, " the plucking, the punching and the popping."

The trick is convincing young mothers like Enjolie Evans to use a
different P-word: patience. And that can be hard for parents to learn.

Evans, a 22-year-old mother of two boys and expecting another, said
she likes to use time out.

"I do it according to their age," she said. "So say like for the 2
year old, I give him a two-minute time out. And the oldest one I will
time him out for about seven minutes, or maybe a little longer, like
maybe a half an hour, and then I go tell him mommy still loves you and
what you did was wrong."

"And I'll explain to him it's all right and then we'll go about our
day. Sometimes I do pop him but by the end of the day, I'd rather put
him in the corner; it's much easier like that, instead of beating your
child."

Evans recognizes that learning patience will benefit everyone in the
family.


Others Can Undo Mothers' Progress

But it's slow going. Grandparents and neighbors can undo any progress.
The good news is that the mothers who first attended Baby College have
kids hitting fourth grade. And they are testing off the charts.

In statewide testing, 75 percent of the third-graders at the Zone's
Promise Academy Charter School tested at or above grade level in math.
And 60 percent of its seventh-graders tested at or above grade level,
which bodes well for those who stay in Canada's charter school pipeline.

Six of a group of ninth-graders said they were definitely on their way
to college, throwing out names like Yale, Columbia, Duke and Harvard.

In the end, what many have learned from this system is spare the rod
and you might just save the community.

"I think it's true, but I will tell you that there is a lot of
skepticism," Canada said. "Our theory is we have got to stay with
these kids straight through until we get them through college. When
I've got hundreds and hundreds of my kids coming back into my
community with college degrees, then I know Harlem is going to be fine."

Canada has a lot of fans, including President Obama, who has budgeted
20 "Promise Neighborhoods" in the nation based on the Harlem
Children's Zone.

For more information, visit Harlem Children's Zone at www.hcz.org


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