July 6, 2020

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
For more information, contact:
Jessica Fletcher, Senior Director,
Communications & External Affairs
The Prichard Committee
859-539-0511 (cell)
jessica.fletcher@prichardcommittee.org

[wyde_heading subheading_tag=”h3″ style=”2″ title=”Prichard Committee’s Student Voice Team Named a Civic Spring Project Grantee” subheading=”Statewide education non-profit will provide active and effective summer civic learning experiences for local youth focusing on the impact of COVID-19″ animation=”slideInLeft”]

Lexington, KY – The Prichard Committee for Academic Excellence announced today that its Student Voice Team has been selected as one of six Civic Spring Project grantees.  The Student Voice Team will use its grant to work creatively over the summer to engage young people building civic knowledge while strengthening their community’s civic infrastructure as the COVID-19 pandemic continues.

The Student Voice Team, under the leadership of adult director Rachel Belin and student director Emmy Sippy, launched the survey in May to learn the impact that school closures had on Kentucky’s students. The survey was answered by nearly 13,000 middle and high school students in all 120 Kentucky counties.

“At the heart of our work is amplifying the stories of students who are most marginalized within the public education system. Almost immediately upon schools closing, it became clear that the students who are all too often unheard would be the same ones most severely impacted by the COVID-19 crisis,” said Sippy, a junior at Henry Clay High School in Lexington. “Students are the experts on what learning during COVID-19 looks like and feels like. Our goal is to help educators, policymakers, and advocates see students as partners in getting through this crisis and in improving schools beyond it.”

The Prichard Committee’s Student Voice Team was selected from among nearly 150 applications nationwide because of its innovative proposal, with program elements designed to be civic-minded, youth-oriented, nonpartisan, nimble, measurement-minded, and generative. It will use the summer months to engage with young people in civic learning, focusing specifically on the student impact of school closures during the pandemic.

“As we continue adjusting to new realities from COVID-19 and seeing citizens across our nation calling for massive and much-needed change, there is tremendous opportunity for our young people to learn what it means to be an informed and effective citizen,” said WW Foundation President Rajiv Vinnakota. “This is an extremely important moment for our young people to work together and with adult partners to address local needs, and we are thrilled to have the Student Voice Team leading the way in Kentucky.”

Launched last month, the Civic Spring Project was collaboratively developed by nearly 40 cross-partisan, subject-matter experts with input from youth. It was developed to catalyze organizations from across the political spectrum to increase civic learning opportunities for young people and challenge the current paradigm of traditional civic education. The experience is intended to increase understanding and social cohesion while individuals expand networks, especially those from marginalized populations.

“The work our Student Voice Team has done to date on this project has been impressive, and we’re grateful that the WW Foundation’s grant will allow us to take this already exceptional work to the next level, allowing the students to use their innovative ideas to lead our schools through this pandemic and into a big, bold future,” said Prichard Committee President and CEO Brigitte Blom Ramsey.

The Student Voice Team’s COVID-19 survey results will be released in early August. For updates on the project’s progress, visit civic-spring.org.

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About the Student Voice Team
The Student Voice Team is an organization made up of about 100 self-selected students, middle school through college, from across the Commonwealth who work to integrate students as research, advocacy, and policy partners in improving Kentucky schools. It is part of the Prichard Committee for Academic Excellence, an independent, nonpartisan, citizen-led organization working to improve education in Kentucky – early childhood through postsecondary.

About the WW Foundation
Founded in 1945, the WW Foundation (www.woodrow.org) identifies and develops the nation’s best minds to meet its most critical challenges. The Foundation supports its Fellows as the next generation of leaders shaping American society.

Author

Jessica Fletcher joined the staff of the Prichard Committee for Academic Excellence in January 2020. She comes to Prichard with more than 17 years experience working in communications, journalism and education advocacy. She has covered local school boards as a journalist in London, Ky. and Winchester, Ky., and communicated about the importance of education to Kentucky's workforce and economy as the Communications Director at the Kentucky Chamber of Commerce. She also served as the Executive Director of Communications at the Kentucky Education and Workforce Development Cabinet and as the Chief Communications Officer for the Kentucky Department of Education. A lifelong Kentuckian, she is a graduate of Rockcastle County High School and Eastern Kentucky University.

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