The Open Door Collective stands against police murder, brutality, and unjustifiable suspicion of Black Americans and other Americans of color, and against the systemic racism that contributes in profound and multifaceted ways to poverty.
What's New?
Fall 2020 Newsletter
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Criminal Justice Reform Paper
In November 2020, the ODC Criminal Justice Reform issues group (CJR) published a third online brief, Foundational Skills Education as a Fundamental Right for Incarcerated and Reentering Adults. CJR makes the case that foundational skills education is a fundamental right for incarcerated and reentering adults and recommends multiple solutions to support incarcerated and re-entering adults. Sharing this new brief with adult and correctional educators, librarians, and jail and prison policy makers and administrators is encouraged.
Contextualizing Adult Education In September 2020 ProLiteracy issued the latest in its series of Research Briefs. Titled "Contextualizing Adult Education: Learning from Six Decades of Experience and Research," this seven-page brief traces the evolution of the contextualized approach to adult basic skills education in the U.S., providing examples and recommendations for educators and other stakeholders interested in integrating basic education with academic and real-world topics of interest to adult learners. Written by Paul Jurmo and Judy Mortrude and edited by Alisa Belzer, all members of the Open Door Collective, the brief can be accessed here: https://www.proliteracy.org/Portals/0/pdf/Research/Briefs/ProLiteracy-Research-Brief-04_Contextualizing-2020-10.pdf |
Open Door Collective members play key roles in latest issue of “Adult Literacy Education" (Vol. 2, Issue 2, 2020), a publication of ProLiteracy.
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Other News
Open Door Collective Webinars
Greening U.S. Adult Basic Skills Efforts: What Eco-partners and Adult Educators Can Do Together September 24, 2020 This webinar featured Alex Risley Schroeder, Barbara Krol-Sinclair, David J. Rosen, and Paul Jurmo, with technical help from Emma Keating. They described why and how adult education programs can collaborate with “eco-partners” (supporters of environmental sustainability and green jobs) and social justice organizations. The presenters described examples of basic skills curricula that integrate environmental themes; green job training customized to adults who have basic skills limitations; green service learning; and joint advocacy, fundraising, research, and professional development by adult education, environmental, and social justice stakeholders. Links to Resources, slides, and webinar recording https://drive.google.com/file/d/1I6AnKrTjmqplA0Y6a3-tQLQT0z0AVxWR/view?usp=sharing Addressing Health Disparities: What Health Practitioners and Adult Educators Can Do Together August 4, 2020 A lively discussion of why and how adult education programs and “health partners" (organizations that in various ways support public health and healthcare jobs) can work together. Links to the webinar slides, webinar recording , chat log.and resource list. Learn more about ODC health-related resources: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1W-EFpoemapm7vA7dv3mQV4_AorjB4-ym/view?usp=sharing.) Open Door Collective Profiled in ALE Journal In the Fall, 2019 issue of the Adult Literacy Education journal, published by ProLiteracy, is a review of the Open Door Collective by Dr. Johan Uvin, Executive Director of the Institute for Educational Leadership and former Associate Commissioner of Education overseeing adult basic skills education. His review focuses on Labor and Workforce Development Issues Group publications. The ODC Labor and Workforce Development Issues Group updated its Work-related Basic Skills Archive as of March 2020. The archive now has 200 resources. It also updated two of its Can-Do Guides: • Strengthening Public Health and the Healthcare Workforce: What U.S. Health Partners and Adult Basic Skills Programs Can Do Together (September 30, 2019 Edition) • Greening U.S. Adult Basic Skills Efforts: What Eco-Partners and Adult Educators Can Do Together (Sept. 30, 2019 Edition) Anti-Poverty Partnerships This paper describes why and how anti-poverty organizations and adult basic skills programs can collaborate to help individuals who have basic skills-related challenges (e.g., lower levels of literacy, English language, and numeracy skills needed for work, family, and civic roles; lack of a high school credential; learning disabilities) to improve their economic security and that of their families and communities. http://www.opendoorcollective.org/anti-poverty-partnerships.html |
Open Door Collective's E-BAES Task Force Report, COVID-19 RAPID RESPONSE REPORT FROM THE FIELD, published on July 31, 2020
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The Open Door Collective (ODC), founded in 2014, assists poverty reduction initiatives to take advantage of, expand, or improve adult foundational (basic) skills services to meet the needs and broaden the economic opportunities of low-income adults. We advocate for effective policies and program designs that will reduce poverty, narrow income inequality, and provide free basic skills education for all adults in the United States. Improved policies and programs will enable adults living in poverty to increase their incomes as well as enjoy more economic stability and better health. These outcomes will diminish the need for social services, increase tax revenues, and lower overall healthcare costs. Expanded adult basic skills services will, therefore, pay for themselves.
ODC's mission is to reduce poverty in the U.S. by building partnerships between adult foundational (or basic) skills programs and organizations supporting social and economic justice. We want adult basic skills advocates to make common cause with advocates for other issues (community health, employment, criminal justice reform, digital equity and inclusion, older adults services, libraries, and others) in order to build an integrated approach to ending poverty. The ODC advocacy issues groups, therefore, are the engines of ODC's efforts. They produce advocacy papers and presentations that set out the common cause within each ODC issue group. We do this because we believe that the efforts taking place within other issue areas will be more successful if adult basic skills advocates and practitioners support them and they support adult basic skills. In addition, we believe that an integrated approach to ending poverty that includes adult foundational (basic) skills and all of the other issues groups is the only way to be successful.
ODC Issues Groups These currently include: Labor and Workforce Development, Public Libraries, Digital Inclusion, Community Health and ABE, Criminal Justice Reform, Immigrant and Refugee Education and Integration, Well-being of older adults and ABE services. Click on this ODC Issues Groups link for more information.
The Open Door Collective (ODC), founded in 2014, assists poverty reduction initiatives to take advantage of, expand, or improve adult foundational (basic) skills services to meet the needs and broaden the economic opportunities of low-income adults. We advocate for effective policies and program designs that will reduce poverty, narrow income inequality, and provide free basic skills education for all adults in the United States. Improved policies and programs will enable adults living in poverty to increase their incomes as well as enjoy more economic stability and better health. These outcomes will diminish the need for social services, increase tax revenues, and lower overall healthcare costs. Expanded adult basic skills services will, therefore, pay for themselves.
ODC's mission is to reduce poverty in the U.S. by building partnerships between adult foundational (or basic) skills programs and organizations supporting social and economic justice. We want adult basic skills advocates to make common cause with advocates for other issues (community health, employment, criminal justice reform, digital equity and inclusion, older adults services, libraries, and others) in order to build an integrated approach to ending poverty. The ODC advocacy issues groups, therefore, are the engines of ODC's efforts. They produce advocacy papers and presentations that set out the common cause within each ODC issue group. We do this because we believe that the efforts taking place within other issue areas will be more successful if adult basic skills advocates and practitioners support them and they support adult basic skills. In addition, we believe that an integrated approach to ending poverty that includes adult foundational (basic) skills and all of the other issues groups is the only way to be successful.
ODC Issues Groups These currently include: Labor and Workforce Development, Public Libraries, Digital Inclusion, Community Health and ABE, Criminal Justice Reform, Immigrant and Refugee Education and Integration, Well-being of older adults and ABE services. Click on this ODC Issues Groups link for more information.
The Open Door Collective is a national program of Literacy Minnesota.
Literacy Minnesota is an internationally recognized non-profit leader and driving force behind the latest developments in literacy learning. We believe literacy has the power to advance equity and justice, and we envision a world where life-changing learning is within everyone’s reach. |