Part Definitions

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As used in this part:

  1. “Community consortium” means a partnership established between an LEA and one (1) or more community partners for purposes of establishing, operating, and sustaining a community school;
  2. “Community partner” means a provider of one (1) or more community services or a community organization or for-profit or nonprofit entity with a desire to improve conditions in the community;
  3. “Community school” means a public and private partnership to coordinate educational, developmental, family, health, and before-school and after-school-care programs during school and nonschool hours for students, families, and local communities at a public school with the objectives of improving academic achievement, reducing absenteeism, building stronger relationships between schools, students, parents, and communities, and improving the skills, capacity, and well-being of the surrounding community residents; and
  4. “Community services” include:
    1. Primary medical and dental care that is available to students and community residents;
    2. Mental health prevention and treatment services that are available to students and community residents;
    3. Academic-enrichment activities designed to promote a student's cognitive development and provide opportunities to practice and apply academic skills;
    4. Programs designed to increase school attendance, including reducing early chronic absenteeism rates;
    5. Youth development programs designed to promote young people's social, emotional, physical, and moral development, including arts, sports, physical fitness, youth leadership, community service, and service-learning opportunities;
    6. Early childhood education, including the voluntary pre-K, Head Start and Early Head Start programs;
    7. Programs designed to:
      1. Facilitate parental involvement in, and engagement with, their children's education, including parental activities that involve supporting, monitoring, and advocating for their children's education;
      2. Promote parental leadership in the life of the school; and
      3. Build parenting skills;
    8. School-age child-care services, including before-school and after-school services and full-day programming that operates during school holidays, summers, vacations, and weekends;
    9. Programs that provide assistance to students who have been truant, suspended, or expelled and that offer multiple pathways to high school graduation, a GED(R) or other alternatives to high school completion;
    10. Youth and adult job-training services and career-counseling services;
    11. Nutrition-education services;
    12. Adult education, including instruction in English as a second language, adult literacy, computer literacy, financial literacy, and hard-skills training; and
    13. Programs that provide remedial education and enrichment activities.


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