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The roots of what is known today as
the Santa Ana Partnership reach back to the 1983-84 program year when
the region’s first inter-segmental partnership formed with leadership
from Manuel Gomez of the University of California, Irvine (UCI) under
the auspices of Project STEP (the Student/Teacher Educational
Partnership). Project STEP included the Santa Ana Unified School
District (SAUSD), Santa Ana College, UCI, California State University,
Fullerton, and Chapman University. The coalition was initially formed in
response to the rapidly changing demographics of the SAUSD, which was
growing exponentially and equally rapidly becoming an overwhelmingly
Latino, English language learning student body. The focus of Project
STEP was to identify areas of academic vulnerability among SAUSD
students and bring all entities together to address them. This initial
analysis resulted in the establishment of a four-pronged structure,
which has endured through the evolution of the partnership. The core
components of Project STEP and of our current partnership are 1)
research and evaluation, 2) direct academic and co-curricular work with
students, 3) professional development for teachers at all levels, and 4)
establishment of an organizing framework that insures parent and
community involvement is not left to chance, maintains communication
among all partners, helps to delineate specific roles and functions, and
facilitates cross-pollination among related reform efforts.
In 1991, Santa
Ana was invited to become part of the Urban Partnership Program, an
initiative that the Ford Foundation was launching to significantly
increase the participation of traditionally underserved urban students
in higher education. Santa Ana hosted the first National Convening of
the Urban Partnership in 1992, and the last in 1999. In the near decade
in-between, a constellation of initiatives was developed and institutionalized that dramatically changed the landscape for students
at all levels in the greater Santa Ana area. The partnership’s work
continues to be nourished by a wide variety of funding sources which
include continued funding from the Ford Foundation for the Collaborating
for Education Reform Initiative, or CERI, the United States Department
of Education for the GEAR UP program, the W.K. Kellogg Foundation for
ENLACE, and a number of others; but perhaps most importantly, through the
funding and resources associated with our own institutions to serve and
support currently enrolled students.
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