Travel & Leisure Close-Up
7/10/2012
San Antonio was named an All-America City by the National Civic League based on its plan to ensure that more children are reading at grade level by the end of third grade.
According to a release, chosen from a field of more than 100 entries, San Antonio’s plan was submitted by a community coalition that included the Antioch Community Transformation Network, Big Brothers Big Sisters, City Year San Antonio, San Antonio Public Library Foundation, United Way of San Antonio and Bexar County, Boys & Girls Clubs, the Kronkosky Charitable Foundation, San Antonio Youth Literacy, the USAA Foundation, the University of Texas at San Antonio and YMCA. The community was one of 14 awardees selected from 32 finalists.
“In San Antonio, we recognize that brainpower is the currency of success in the 21st century,” said San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro. “Those cities that nurture it will be the most prosperous in the coming years and decades. For that reason, we are truly honored by the All-America City Award because it shows we are on the right track to get every child to read by the third grade and put them on a path to academic success and a brighter economic future.”
Beyond the award contest, San Antonio’s plan makes the city a charter member in the Campaign for Grade-Level Reading Communities Network, a national movement of local and state leaders, nonprofits, and foundations putting a stake in the ground on third-grade reading.
The awards are given each year by the National Civic League for outstanding civic accomplishments.
“This partnership with the Campaign has been an amazing experience for our All-America City Awards,” said Gloria Rubio-Cortes, president of the National Civic League which has sponsored the award for more than 60 years. “We were overwhelmed by the quality, passion and thoughtfulness of all the action plans submitted by more than 100 cities, towns and regions. There is a real and deep commitment to ensuring that our children are prepared to succeed.”
The 124 cities and counties in the network, representing 350 school districts with 8 million students, are adopting a collective impact strategy, engaging the full community around the goal of supporting low-income children from birth through third grade.
San Antonio’s plan to increase school readiness, attendance and grade-level reading performance involves setting measurable goals based on independently developed data, preparing students academically for postsecondary success, building teachers’ capacity to deliver instruction to every student and encouraging parents to share in the responsibility for student learning. The city has set an ambitious goal of having 100 percent of third graders reading at grade level by the year 2020.
“It is an honor for the City of San Antonio to receive the All-America City Grade Level Reading Award,” said San Antonio City Manager Sheryl Sculley. “We recognize the significance of providing the support and leadership needed to afford children in our community with the equitable opportunity to acquire strong reading proficiency abilities. Through continued collaboration with our education partners, the City will remain proactively engaged in this highly rewarding community-wide learning endeavor. All children deserve an equal ability to learn and achieve.”
The National Civic League is a 117-year-old nonpartisan, nonprofit organization.
More information:
www.ncl.org
www.allamericacityaward.com
PUBLICATION-TYPE: Newsletter
Copyright 2012 Close-Up Media, Inc.
All Rights Reserved
Georgia town sued for mandatory gun ownership ordinance







