Posted on 01/07/2012 3:41:19 PM PST by Graybeard58
At 15, Jarvis Nelson should be in high school and even thinking about college.
Yet Jarvis is in seventh grade, and doesnt know where hell go to high school or even where he will be living when he graduates from junior high, hopefully next year.
Thats because Jarvis has attended three different schools in the past four months. Hes lived in three different places on the North and South Sides of the city including his most recent home, a temporary shelter in Lake View.
Jarvis, like thousands of other students in Chicago Public Schools, is homeless.
He is just one of more than 10,660 students who were homeless at the beginning of the school year. Thats 1,466 more than at the same point in the previous school year, according to a CPS tally.
And since the last school year ended with a record 15,580 students with nowhere to call home, the current surge means this school year is on pace to be another record breaker.
While some of the increase is due to better identification of which students are homeless, experts said the problem has gotten worse as the economy tanked and foreclosures skyrocketed.
And even though most economists say that the recession is basically over there are large swatches of the city that are still feeling the effects of it, said Nicole Amling, director of public policy for the Chicago Alliance to End Homelessness.
There are families becoming homeless for the first time because they lost their housing, she said. There are people who have been just getting by for a long time on some part-time job and then that part-time job went away, and so theyre now falling into the shelter system, or theyre staying with grandma or an aunt. I think it really signifies that we are in dire economic times.
Part of a national problem
Experts said the problem is similar across the state and nation.
More than 57,000 Illinois children were homeless in 2010, up from 30,636 in 2006, according to a December report from The National Center on Family Homelessness.
Nationally, 1.6 million U.S. children lived in homeless shelters, motels, with relatives or other families or living on the street in 2010 a 38 percent increase since 2007, according to the center.
The large number of homeless students presents a particular challenge to school districts.
In addition to emotional and health problems, homeless students are more likely to go hungry and are four times more likely to show delayed development, the center says. They have twice the rate of learning disabilities as non-homeless children and the vast majority of them lack proficiency in math and reading. At CPS, 98 percent of homeless students are members of minority groups.
The problem is so bad that CPS has special staff who work in the CPS Students in Temporary Living Situations Office.
Students in the program can choose whether to stay in their original school when they lose their housing or enroll in the school closest to their shelter or new housing. They can get transportation assistance, tutoring and free meals, uniforms and school supplies. And the students have advocates who help them navigate the system, officials said.
I want to stay at this school ... and make friends
Since November, Jarvis has been living at a Catholic Charities interim family shelter in Lake View along with his 18-month-old sister Janiyah and their mother, Regenia.
Regenia Nelson was a home healthcare nurse with her own apartment before she got into a fight and spent a year in jail on felony aggravated battery charges in 2005. Shes been in and out of low-wage jobs but had difficulty getting steady work because of her record.
Its hard for me to get a job because of my past, said Nelson, who holds a GED from City Colleges of Chicago and grew up in Stateway Gardens, a since-demolished public housing development in Bronzeville on the South Side.
Unable to afford rent, the family has spent most of the past seven years living with Nelsons mother in a one-bedroom apartment on the South Side. But in September her mother asked them to leave. After that, they spent a month with Nelsons sister, husband and five children but the South Side home proved to be too crowded.
Jarvis academic problems began while his mom was locked up and he lived with his grandmother. He has repeated both the third and sixth grades because of low reading scores.
But his recent homelessness has only made things worse. So far this school year, Jarvis has been at three different schools, including Songhai Learning Institute, Claremont Academy and most recently, Blaine Elementary School. Its tiring. I want to stay at this school [Blaine] and finish and make friends, he said.
Better to be in here than on the streets
He said it was tough to leave his friends at Songhai Learning Institute and walk away from an afterschool program that taught him to play the trumpet.
At Claremont, which he attended for only a few weeks in October while living at an aunts house, the work was much harder than he was used to.
It felt like they were teaching something else, he said.
At Blaine, he is learning to play violin, but he said the curriculum still confuses him.
At the same time, he said he also finds it hard to re-learn some of the concepts he already learned at Songhai.
Making friends is also hard for the soft-spoken, shy teen, and he keeps the fact that he is homeless private. Hes only told one student while the two discussed having a sleepover. However, Jarvis cant do one, because shelter rules prohibit a friend from staying over and prohibit him from sleeping somewhere else. Jarvis is also upset that he cant stay up past 9 p.m., even on weekends, because of shelter rules.
He constantly worries about his family abruptly losing the small room they share at the shelter if he were to break the rules, Jarvis said.
Better to be in here than on the streets, he said, where theres no place to go.
College? Or a Streets & San job?
Nelson said her son has had problems skipping school and doesnt want to go many mornings, which has contributed to his academic problems.
You got to get up and get going so you can do better for yourself, she tells him.
While Jarvis is on track to graduate junior high next year and enroll in high school, he hasnt given much thought to what school he will attend.
Its hard, he said. What if we move and then I have to rethink?
His mother, who is starting a job-training program for ex-offenders Tuesday, says she has stressed the importance of getting a college education so he doesnt end up like her homeless and unable to support a family.
But college is a distant concept for Jarvis, even though he does want to go someday.
For now, he said he hopes to be a bus driver or Streets and Sanitation worker, and thats about it.
This is a travesty
A huge majority of the “poor” is kids and it is not their fault.
Can’t we at least do something
For Heaven’s sake, this really galls me.
These kids will grow up into dangerous damaged people if something isn’t done
Thank Heaven someone has all the answers
Listen Johnny, if you have all the answers, DO SOMETHING
/johnny
I asked my collectors once what their pay was. They told me $22. per hour plus time and a half for over time, that was a couple of years ago and they are not union.
I always tip the two of them around Christmas time. If a raccoon gets in my garbage, they pick it up off the street for me, that’s not part of their job. That alone is worth the tip.
All I can do is tithe and give dollars to the people standing with cardboard signs which I do
But then I don’t have all the answers
They actually like their job, and like doing a good job at it.
Everybody puts their trashcans higglety-piggelty up and down the street. But when the guys some pick up our trash... the cans are left aligned in a military kind of straight line. Upside down, to drain.
They know I'll feel the truck coming by, and be out there to pick up my container. I do appreciate them.
/johnny
I have lots of opportunity to teach (and learn).
And hero, I don't have all the answers, but I have enough for most situations.
BTW, feeding the homeless is good. Giving them cash is probably causing the problems that you want solved.
/johnny
It just makes him qualified under students with disabilities act.
In UK you can't include any qualifications for a job in advertisements. That would discriminate against anyone who doesn't have those qualifications.
yitbos
And good for you. Keep giving them the training they can take and want. It will last a lifetime.
MIT has a bunch of on-line lectures on this kind of stuff under AI (of all things). It's on YouTube(tm). They get into dendritic structures &ct.... but bottom line is kids are plastic early, and everything you can teach them sticks, and either integrates now, or later.
/johnny
15 and in 7th grade? Interesting.
It was the early '60s and dad (and I, unofficially) were going through a DeVry electonics course.
Mom didn't want me handling a soldering iron. But dad said I had better eyes and a steadier hand than he did.
So I soldered most of the detailed work on the amplifier, receiver, and some of the rest. Before I got my first ham radio licence, at age 11.
It's sad that parents restict their children from learning opportunities. But being respectful of the rights of parents to raise their children... All I can do is bitch about it.
I do know that giving children learning opportunities works well, and makes them hungry for learning more.
/johnny
A while back NPR did a story about the old conservations camps of the 30’s. The young men who attended these camps were thrilled at the opportunity. They worked hard cutting trails and cutting trees during the day but were able to eat as much as they wanted, most of them for the first time. They sent half their small paycheck home to their families.
If they tried offering this opportunity to young kids today they’d laugh.
'Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with all your might'.
I'm big on that concept. Even if it's dumping trash. I'm commanded to, actually.
And I'm ok with feeding kids or hired hands, or cows treading grain as much as they want. Kcals in = Kcals out, minus the biological overhead.
/johnny
I like to watch House Hunters. I am constantly amazed at the young couples who want things in a million+ house on a $150,000 budget. Don’t they know any better?
We're just who we are. Regardless of how anyone wants to catagorize us.
Standing up and doing what has to be done does make some lawyer types uncomfortable. But they get over it. Eventually. Or not.
But I can teach lawyers to shoot as well as 10 year olds. Well.. it takes longer for the lawyers.. but besides that....
/johnny
That is such a wonderful saying:
Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with all your might, for in the grave, where you are going, there is neither working nor planning nor knowledge nor wisdom.
What has happened to the work ethic? what has happened to the joy in accomplishment?
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