Military Child Initiative

Technical Assistance for Districts and Schools on Partnership Program Development

The Military Child Initiative (MCI) aims to improve educational environments for highly mobile and vulnerable young people, with a special focus on children and families in the military. MCI was initially funded by the U.S. Department of Defense Military Child in Transition and Deployment State Liaison Office as a collaborative project of the Bloomberg School of Public Health and the Center on School, Family, and Community Partnerships at Johns Hopkins University.

Although the original contract ended, the National Network of Partnership Schools (NNPS) continues to offer Technical Assistance on partnership program development to districts and schools that serve children from military families.

Technical Assistance to Districts and Schools on School, Family, and Community Partnerships

The Technical Assistance (TA) component of MCI uses the research-based approaches of the National Network of Partnership Schools (NNPS) at Johns Hopkins University to help schools and districts with large numbers of students from military families improve and sustain their programs of family and community involvement.

In NNPS, district leaders for partnerships are guided to assist all of their schools in developing excellent programs of family and community involvement. Each “Partnership School” organizes an Action Team for Partnerships (ATP), writes an annual plan, selects practices for the framework of six types of involvement linked to school improvement goals, and evaluates its work to continually improve its program.

Technical Assistance from NNPS helps district leaders and their schools:

NNPS helps members organize their leadership and programs of partnerships. Among its services, NNPS:

Technical Assistance from NNPS. These include:

Other MCI products

See other MCI projects and products developed by colleagues at the School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University, including:

Reports and Resources. Effective programs and best practices are described to improve school climate, family and community partnerships, students' "connectedness," transitions to new schools, and the academic, social, emotional, and health of students from military families. Click on www.jhsph.edu/mci.
Best Practices Library. For examples and ideas of effective programs and practices, click on http://www.jhsph.edu/mci/Library/index.html.
Building Resilient Kids. This distance learning course was developed by Dr. Michael Blum for the Military Child Initiative at Johns Hopkins University.  Among many topics, the course includes 2 modules on School, Family, and Community Partnerships and on School-Community Partnerships, designed with Dr. Joyce Epstein and Dr. Mavis Sanders at NNPS. 

Online course:

www.jhsph.edu/mci
Click on Building Resilient Kids

To register for
course credit:

Field Studies in Educational Foundations (EDEF 469)
University of Hawaii - Manoa Outreach College
10 weeks - 3 credits
Click on University of Hawaii credit

 

For more information on NNPS benefits and services, visit these sections of this website:

NNPS Model See the major components of district and school programs.
Research and Evaluation Learn about the research that underlies the NNPS model, tools, and materials for program development.
Success Stories Read about effective practices from districts and schools across the country. See over 600 Promising Partnership Practices In the annual collections from members of NNPS.
Professional Development Review NNPS conference agendas and workshop series. See costs for training.
Join NNPS Download a letter of invitation, list of benefits and services, and membership forms.

For more information on Technical Assistance to improve programs of family and community involvement in schools that serve children from military families, contact:

Darcy Hutchins, Senior Program Facilitator
National Network of Partnership Schools
dhutchins@csos.jhu.edu
410-516-8893