
Students and Teachers Discover New Ways to LearnThe Duke Endowment invested $3 million from 2002–2004 to help teachers and students discover new ways to improve academic performance. ChallengeMany children living in group homes suffer from developmental and other challenges that make it difficult for them to learn in traditional ways. As a result, schoolwork becomes daunting and discouraging, adding yet another layer of challenge to already difficult circumstances. In 2001, The Duke Endowment asked children's homes that were grantees of the Endowment about the reading readiness of students in their care. The results showed that more than 50 percent of students in responding homes were not performing at the appropriate grade level for their ages. Many were at least one academic year behind, and several were behind by three or four years. ResponseLearning InitiativeBecause The Duke Endowment believes that academic success is a key factor in a child's overall happiness, self-esteem and hope for the future, the Endowment created the Learning Initiative in partnership with All Kinds of Minds, a nonprofit affiliated with the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. All Kinds of Minds focuses on the many ways that children can learn, and helps both children and educators capitalize on learning strengths and address weaknesses. The Learning Initiative looked at whether All Kinds of Minds' proven approaches could help improve academic success among residents of the nine participating children's homes. The nine children's homes participating in the Learning Initiative were divided into two cohorts to facilitate program delivery and evaluation. The first group began work in 2002, the second in 2003. (Two homes dropped out during the course of the initiative.) Three-pronged ApproachFor the Learning Initiative, All Kinds of Minds delivered a three-prong approach at participating homes:
Participating SitesNorth Carolina
South Carolina
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