3 Days of Liberation: New CRPE Report

Welcome to 3 Days of Liberation! 

We’ve got so much good news to share from The Oakland REACH that we need three days to do it — I promise, you won’t want to miss any of these updates.

On Day 1 of this series, I’m sharing a first look at new research, released today by The Center on Reinventing Public Education (CRPE), that shows students in Oakland who worked with tutors were more likely to make gains in literacy compared to their peers who lacked access to small group literacy instruction. Importantly, the report finds that our tutors — who we proudly call Liberators — helped students make “similar literacy gains as those who primarily received instruction from Oakland teachers.”

This report is a big deal because it reinforces the promise of our Liberator Model to be a critical piece to building a cohesive, results-oriented literacy ecosystem.  

A reminder about our Liberator Model:

Our Liberator Model upskills parents and caregivers to be paid tutors, providing high-dosage tutoring in some of the lowest-performing schools in Oakland.

 In 2023, we trained 46 parents and caregivers to build the skills needed to succeed in schools. This model is unique because it creatively addresses five academic and socio-economic needs of both students and families: 

I came away from this new report with three big takeaways: 

  1. The power of putting parents and caregivers into the game to win for their students: This is the REACH’s secret sauce. By investing in parents and caregivers to become paid tutors, the REACH is helping to fill a much-needed talent pipeline in the district. We’re taking parents and caregivers — whose impact is often sidelined and minimized — and putting them on the frontline of those solutions that get their children reading. By maximizing the role parents and caregivers can play in their child’s education, we’re hoping to reverse the decades-long trend of miseducation. 

  2. A way to support teachers and mitigate burnout: We’re showing how to rethink the longstanding model that leaves one teacher responsible for the learning needs of 25 or more students without resources. That model doesn't work for teachers, but it also doesn't work for students. We see big opportunities if systems deepen integration of tutors and paraprofessionals into the school day — both for the adults who work in schools and the students who attend them. 

  3. How to build effective long-term partnerships: Almost five years ago, our families told us that literacy was keeping them up at night. We listened, and stepped boldly into Oakland’s literacy ecosystem. We have won policies and launched the Liberator Model. We have learned so much. We understand that we have to be a nimble systems partner. We are now serving as an ecosystem leader to support better cohesion and alignment across all tiers of literacy instruction. We must be willing to change our “seat at the table” to have long-term impact and results. 

I am so grateful to Accelerate for funding this research because I believe it’s so important to talk about results. I hope you’ll consider sharing the report with your community. 

Stay tuned for two more updates this week! We hope you are encouraged to both optimize the power of parents to increase outcomes for their own children and children in their communities, and to be a flexible, yet bold partner building towards a sustainable literacy ecosystem. 

Lakisha Young • Founder and CEO

Lakisha Young is Founder & CEO of The Oakland REACH, a parent-power organization that launched in 2016. She knows from her own story that winning in education is par for the course when you already have what you need to win in life — and because of that, everything REACH does is about ensuring every family has what they need to win in life.

Lakisha developed a formula that has guided REACH’s work since day one: Ask families questions. Listen to their aspirations. Build the solutions. Liberate our communities. This formula has produced a mix of groundbreaking programming and advocacy work over the last 6 years, including The Opportunity Ticket, which gives the most vulnerable students higher preference for enrolling in quality schools, and the Literacy for All campaign, which is about empowering the whole family around literacy to truly disrupt systemically poor literacy outcomes in underserved communities. 

During the pandemic, Lakisha pioneered one of REACH’s most innovative solutions to date: The Virtual Family Hub, a one-stop shop supporting families’ economic survival and their children’s educational success. The Hub has been featured in local, national, and international media, including Today.com, TIME Magazine, CNN, KQED, BBC News, Univision, The San Francisco Chronicle, and more.

Inspired by the Hub’s success and with families returning to in-person learning, REACH created The Liberator Model to train parents and caregivers in the community to become tutors in some of the lowest-performing Oakland schools. Through this model, REACH is now supporting the training and retention of ~200 tutors, providing high-quality, high-dosage tutoring to 5,500+ students across 38 schools. A study of the model called parents an “untapped pool of talent” and noted they were as effective as teachers in tutoring readers.

Lakisha is a respected national voice on parent power and regularly consults other cities across the country interested in learning more about REACH’s transformative model. She is a Senior Fellow at The Center on Reinventing Public Education and is a regular contributor to their “People in Action” series. In 2023, Lakisha was recognized by KRON4 as the Bay Area’s Remarkable Woman.

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3 Days of Liberation: A Day in the Life of a Literacy Liberator

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Reclaiming Math through our Liberator Model