Study: Pregnant teens need better school support
MIAMI (AP) - When 15-year-old Kali Gonzalez became pregnant, the honors student considered transferring to an alternative school. She worried teachers would harass her for missing class because of doctor's appointments and morning sickness.
A guidance counselor urged Gonzalez not to, saying that could lower her standards.
Instead, her counselor set up a meeting with teachers at her St. Augustine high school to confirm she could make up missed assignments, eat in class and use the restroom whenever she needed. Gonzalez, who is now 18, kept an A-average while pregnant. She capitalized on an online school program for parenting students so she could stay home and take care of her baby during her junior year. She returned to school her senior year and graduated with honors in May.
But Gonzalez is a rare example of success among pregnant students. Schools across the country are divided over how to handle them, with some schools kicking them out or penalizing students for pregnancy-related absences. And many schools say they can't afford costly support programs, including tutoring, child care and transportation for teens who may live just a few miles from school but still too far to walk while pregnant or with a small child.
Nearly 400,000 girls and young women between 15 and 19 years old gave birth in 2010, a rate of 34 per 1,000, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Those statistics have led child advocates to push for greater adherence to a1972 law that bans sex discrimination in federally funded education programs and activities, according to a new report by the National Women's Law Center.
Fatima Goss Graves, the center's vice president of education and employment, says offering pregnant teens extra support would ultimately save taxpayers money by helping them become financially independent and not dependent on welfare.
But budget cuts have eaten into such efforts.
California lawmakers slashed a successful program for such students in 2008, ruling it was no longer mandatory, and allowed school districts to use the money for other programs.
More than 100,000 pregnant and parenting students have participated in the program that helps them with classwork and connects them with social services. It boasted a 73 percent graduation rate in 2010 - close to the state's normal rate - and advocates said participants were less reliant on welfare and less likely to become pregnant again. That compares to several counties where only 30 percent of pregnant and parenting teens graduated.
"It's unfortunate that this effective program fell prey to the enormous budget challenges we are facing as a state," said State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Torlakson.
Three years ago in Wisconsin, cost-cutting lawmakers dropped a requirement for school districts to give pregnant students who live within two miles of a school building free rides to school. The requirement had been part of an effort to improve access to education and reduce infant mortality rates.
Less than half of the states have programs that send home assignments to homebound or hospitalized student parents, according to the study.
In almost half of the states, including Idaho, Nevada, Nebraska, South Dakota and Utah, the definition of excused absences is not broad enough to include pregnant and parenting students. That typically results in a patchwork of policies where some school districts don't excuse absences even if the student is in the hospital giving birth, according to the study.
But a few states have developed programs to help improve graduate rates among pregnant girls and young mothers.
In Washington, D.C., caseworkers in the New Heights Teen Parent Program often stand by the school entrance or text pregnant students and young moms to make sure they are attending classes.
When students do miss school, caseworkers take them homework assignments. About 600 students participate in the program which also helps students with housing, child care and parenting skills. But the $1.6 million federal grant funding the program runs out next year and officials said they don't have a clear future funding source.
Roughly 4,500 male and female student parents participated in a Pennsylvania program last year where case workers helped them balance school and child care. Nearly 1,300 graduated or received an equivalent, state officials said. The ELECT program, which started in 1990 as a partnership between state child welfare and education officials, monitors students' attendance, coordinates summer programs and links them with support systems in the community.
Florida allows pregnant and parenting students to receive homebound instruction and lays out a clear process to make up missed work. The state also gives those students the option of taking online classes.
In St. Johns County, where Gonzalez lives, the school district provides free day care for teen moms and bus transportation for students and their children.
Pregnant students are often stereotyped as low-achievers, but advocates say pregnancy actually motivates some to do better in school.
Gonzalez, whose daughter is now 2, said her grades improved after she became pregnant.
"I did push myself a lot harder and I made sure that I wasn't going to be that statistic," said Gonzalez, who is now married and pursuing a nursing degree.
A guidance counselor urged Gonzalez not to, saying that could lower her standards.
Instead, her counselor set up a meeting with teachers at her St. Augustine high school to confirm she could make up missed assignments, eat in class and use the restroom whenever she needed. Gonzalez, who is now 18, kept an A-average while pregnant. She capitalized on an online school program for parenting students so she could stay home and take care of her baby during her junior year. She returned to school her senior year and graduated with honors in May.
But Gonzalez is a rare example of success among pregnant students. Schools across the country are divided over how to handle them, with some schools kicking them out or penalizing students for pregnancy-related absences. And many schools say they can't afford costly support programs, including tutoring, child care and transportation for teens who may live just a few miles from school but still too far to walk while pregnant or with a small child.
Nearly 400,000 girls and young women between 15 and 19 years old gave birth in 2010, a rate of 34 per 1,000, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Those statistics have led child advocates to push for greater adherence to a1972 law that bans sex discrimination in federally funded education programs and activities, according to a new report by the National Women's Law Center.
Fatima Goss Graves, the center's vice president of education and employment, says offering pregnant teens extra support would ultimately save taxpayers money by helping them become financially independent and not dependent on welfare.
But budget cuts have eaten into such efforts.
California lawmakers slashed a successful program for such students in 2008, ruling it was no longer mandatory, and allowed school districts to use the money for other programs.
More than 100,000 pregnant and parenting students have participated in the program that helps them with classwork and connects them with social services. It boasted a 73 percent graduation rate in 2010 - close to the state's normal rate - and advocates said participants were less reliant on welfare and less likely to become pregnant again. That compares to several counties where only 30 percent of pregnant and parenting teens graduated.
"It's unfortunate that this effective program fell prey to the enormous budget challenges we are facing as a state," said State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Torlakson.
Three years ago in Wisconsin, cost-cutting lawmakers dropped a requirement for school districts to give pregnant students who live within two miles of a school building free rides to school. The requirement had been part of an effort to improve access to education and reduce infant mortality rates.
Less than half of the states have programs that send home assignments to homebound or hospitalized student parents, according to the study.
In almost half of the states, including Idaho, Nevada, Nebraska, South Dakota and Utah, the definition of excused absences is not broad enough to include pregnant and parenting students. That typically results in a patchwork of policies where some school districts don't excuse absences even if the student is in the hospital giving birth, according to the study.
But a few states have developed programs to help improve graduate rates among pregnant girls and young mothers.
In Washington, D.C., caseworkers in the New Heights Teen Parent Program often stand by the school entrance or text pregnant students and young moms to make sure they are attending classes.
When students do miss school, caseworkers take them homework assignments. About 600 students participate in the program which also helps students with housing, child care and parenting skills. But the $1.6 million federal grant funding the program runs out next year and officials said they don't have a clear future funding source.
Roughly 4,500 male and female student parents participated in a Pennsylvania program last year where case workers helped them balance school and child care. Nearly 1,300 graduated or received an equivalent, state officials said. The ELECT program, which started in 1990 as a partnership between state child welfare and education officials, monitors students' attendance, coordinates summer programs and links them with support systems in the community.
Florida allows pregnant and parenting students to receive homebound instruction and lays out a clear process to make up missed work. The state also gives those students the option of taking online classes.
In St. Johns County, where Gonzalez lives, the school district provides free day care for teen moms and bus transportation for students and their children.
Pregnant students are often stereotyped as low-achievers, but advocates say pregnancy actually motivates some to do better in school.
Gonzalez, whose daughter is now 2, said her grades improved after she became pregnant.
"I did push myself a lot harder and I made sure that I wasn't going to be that statistic," said Gonzalez, who is now married and pursuing a nursing degree.
Typical of the liberal elitists to arrive at the conclusion that the obvious answer to this problem is more money, more cash, and more 'programs' for schools. Liberals, totally oblivious to the causes [intentionally I believe] of little girls becoming pregnant, offer their only reaction, more taxpayer dollars. Never mind the parents responsibility of teaching their children the simple basics of self respect and some degree of self control. There isn't room on this page to express my disgust with the menagerie of misfits and trash that masquerade as 'parents' by today's standards. It's no surprise so many young girls are so quick to 'put-out' for whoever is handy. Good job 'parents'. What ever became of pride?    Â
I like the old way of doing things: banishment & stigmas. Kept the teen birth rate low.
Maybe they should use some of the funding from the varsity sports programs...after all...
"In almost half of the states, including Idaho, Nevada, Nebraska, South Dakota and Utah, the definition of excused absences is not broad enough to include pregnant and parenting students. That typically results in a patchwork of policies where some school districts don't excuse absences even if the student is in the hospital giving birth, according to the study. " Â Where are people with brains?
How about students not getting pregnant until after graduation?
maybe they should've practiced some absinence if they're worried about being absent from class
The money we do have to spend on educating our kids should go toward providing QUALITY education for serious students. If you care so little about your education that you allow yourself to become pregnant before getting that education, the rest of the students should not have to suffer by having education funds used to provide daycare and other support services for pregnant mothers.
Ok I am now really confused, 16 is legal consent, 15 kids are having babies, a teacher can go to jail for having sex with a 17 year old..If a 15 yer old is able to have a baby, yet we state that they are not mature enough to handle it and try to take the kid from them, all hell breaks loose .. I think we have a problem.. And its not just teens getting pregnant. So Now what do we do? make it against the law for teens to have babies? and if a 15 year old can get benefits for having a child...You know this is a wonder why were in such a mess. We reward having kids by teens by getting them on government programs. I have take to Teen pregnancies as the new norm. Next thing you know Kids are going to start demanding certain rights, then what are we going to do? What if the teen says I want a job? what if they have the skills and the talent to do the job they want to do just like the kids who is doing his science project? What if the pregnant teens start saying give me a job?
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Even 13 year old getting pregnant can't surprise me any more..Nothing shocks me any more.
I have even seen a 9 year old pregnant. Online that is..In some countries they Mary at 12 or after there periods..Yet we call them manyt nasty names because of our ideology in which they are not accustom to.
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And don't get me wrong, any one here in the states who is an adult having sex with a child should go to prison.
I am jsut stating that I for see in the future some new rights being forged.
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it is bad enough that we have sexed our kids in to being little adults before there time. Need I remind you of the retail profession and how times we had speak up?
@lee986321 If you were literate, I bet you have some points to make. Your obvious and extensive lack of composition skills, however, really get in your way. Proof reading your work could pay big dividends. For example, you don't mean that "15 kids are having babies," do you? Don't you really intend to say that 15 year-old kids are having babies?
 @Mechanic  @lee986321 Mechanic, I could care less if you literate in fixing things or not, You illiterate on human sexuality and teens promiscuity. But then there are those literate or not who "look Away at the truth" go a head and mach me if it makes you feel better, it don't bug me any, that is the nice thing about the internet..Who gives a real rats Arse on what any of us think.
You seriously think were the majority here? were not, were a minority speaking on things and issues..Hell there are people out there don't even Know that KATU exists. so my smart arse how much do you realty know on this subject? I think you just flat scared that kids are going down this road.
Or some odd reason you feel threatened on my ignorance.. You must feel threaten for some reason to state I am literate.. Maybe it hurts your ego to have some one know something you do not.
Maybe your Ego needs a bruising.
at any rate, yes teens are having babies, they have done so and always will do so.
 @lee986321 Still embarrassing yourself, Lee? Maybe you'll wake up less intoxicated and delete all these nonsensical posts too?
 @Mechanic  @lee986321
http://youtu.be/IkUf6q3cyfE
http://youtu.be/0-W1r_kZJr4
http://youtu.be/m-XY_LjRZd8
http://youtu.be/alWJQ709Jdg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wz0AYnf1aCc
http://youtu.be/Kyt5Q3RIaT4
http://youtu.be/C7_VTlj-j2M
Dad at 13 | Boy Alfie Patten, 13, becomes father of baby girl Maisi
Jan 12, 2011
Girl, 11, will be Britain's youngest mother
May 12, 2006
10-Year-Old Girl Gives Birth to Daughter - ABC News
Apr 6, 2012
13-Year-Old Father's Sister Also Had A Baby At 13
Feb 14, 2009
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It certainly looks like kids are having babies rather they intended to or not.
I suggest you go crawl back into your hole
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You are more ignorant then I.
especially if you haven't viewed Teen Mom's on discovery channel, Now who is the illiterate one?
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 @lee986321  @felines99  @Mechanic Okay . . . .
 @Mechanic Mechanic 302 pts @lee986321 I bet you have some points to make. so you did get something out of it I'll take that as a compliment hehe,.at least you understood it.
 @felines99  @Mechanic So, I have a hard time expressing my self in writ form Hell we all have our down falls some here drink them selves into oblivion.
 @lee986321  @Mechanic Sorry, but I agree with Mechanic. There are so many grammatical errors and irregularities in your comments that I find it impossible to understand much of what you are trying to say. Just a little constructive criticism.
Don't get pregnant at 15!!!
A guidance counselor urged Gonzalez not to, saying that could lower her standards.
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Considering she's 15 AND pregnant, I'd say her standards were almost non-existent.