NCASE Resource Library
Reset Selections
Topics
- Culturally Responsive Practice & Inclusion (10) Apply Culturally Responsive Practice & Inclusion filter
- Family and Community Engagement (5) Apply Family and Community Engagement filter
- Professional Development (7) Apply Professional Development filter
- Program Design and Management (9) Apply Program Design and Management filter
- Quality Improvement (10) Apply Quality Improvement filter
- School & Community Partnerships (10) Apply School & Community Partnerships filter
- Subsidy, Eligibility, and Equal Access (3) Apply Subsidy, Eligibility, and Equal Access filter
- Supportive Learning Environment (13) Apply Supportive Learning Environment filter
- Systems Building (10) Apply Systems Building filter
Resource type
Publisher
- (-) Remove The Wallace Foundation filter The Wallace Foundation
- Afterschool Alliance (2) Apply Afterschool Alliance filter
- Education Development Center (EDC) (1) Apply Education Development Center (EDC) filter
- National Summer Learning Association (NSLA) (7) Apply National Summer Learning Association (NSLA) filter
- Office of Child Care (OCC) (4) Apply Office of Child Care (OCC) filter
- Other (4) Apply Other filter
Search Results
Filter By
This slide show provides a summary of what parents, teachers, and Out-of-School Time (OST) providers want in summer programs for 2021 based on a combination of focus groups, interviews, and 3,031 surveys. Results indicate that parents want summer programs to prioritize their children’s social and emotional health.
This report shares evaluation findings from 2017 of the longer-term impacts of a summer learning project in five school districts: Boston, Dallas, Duval County in Florida, Pittsburgh, and Rochester. It explores the effects of two consecutive summers of voluntary, full-day programming for at least 20 days three school years after the second summer of programming.
This report summarizes lessons learned from the Wallace Foundation's National Summer Learning Project in the five cities of Boston, Dallas, Jacksonville, Pittsburgh, and Rochester.
This toolkit features more than 50 adaptable tools, sample documents, tip sheets, and guidance on how to use them drawn from five urban districts and their partners, who formed the National Summer Learning Project. It is organized into five planning areas: (1) staffing, (2) site climate, (3) student recruitment, (4) planning, and (5) academics and enrichment.