Please welcome Emily to WEC!

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Please join us in welcoming Emily Dodge who will join the WEC staff as Assistant Director.  A graduate of Middlebury College, Emily is also a newly minted alumna of the Harvard Graduate School of Education where she studied education policy and management.  Her resume is most impressive and includes work as a Measurement and Improvement Manager at Boston After School and Beyond, where she helped out-of-school-time organizations leverage data to catalyze program quality improvement and student skill development. Prior to that, Emily taught middle school math at a Boston charter school. Emily will be an integral part of our all-hands-on-deck organization, with a primary focus on supporting and developing Woo-Labs.

Educator Resource: Creating A "Brave" Space for Civil Discourse

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Fostering civil discourse is a necessity in today’s classroom and the implications and consequences of how well that is done determine how well students when they become adults, can build well-adjusted, productive, and inclusive families and communities.

We’ve invited Facing History and Ourselves to help us understand how we can use the lessons of history and current events to stand up to bigotry and hate.

Access the full Educator Reference Sheet: Fostering Civil Discourse: How do we talk about issues that matter?

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The Landscape of Public Education - Public Hearing Podcast Ep. 1

“This crisis that we are in has the potential to be transformational.“

Our Executive Director Jennifer Davis Carey is featured in the first episode of Public Hearing’s podcast where she provides a broader look at how public education serves or doesn’t serve, the needs of young people and their families here in the U.S. She also shares insight on how the Worcester Education Collaborative, through the Education Equity Roundtable, is leveraging community partnerships to address and meet urgent needs related to education in Worcester.

Public Hearing is Action! By Design’s podcast and radio show talking about smart cities, systems change, and equity-centered development through the lens of our home City of Worcester, MA. They explore challenges facing the community and discuss solutions with a focus on inclusion, equity, and prosperity.

Hosted by Joshua Croke, founder of Action! by Design.

Available anywhere people find podcasts.
Airs on
WICN 90.5FM, Worcester’s NPR affiliate station on Wednesday evenings at 6:00pm.


Upcoming Event: April 28th at 4 PM

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Please join us at our next public forum School Re-entry after COVID: Response and Re-imagination on April 28th at 4 pm! Register HERE.

Get to know our guest speakers:

• Liz Hamilton, Executive Director, Boys & Girls Club of Worcester: The View from the Learning Hubs: What are kids looking for as schools re-open? What will they need?

• Natasha Ushomirsky, Massachusetts State Director, The Education Trust: The View from the Massachusetts Education Equity Partnership and the Education Trust: How can we learn from the experience of kids and parents with remote and hybrid schooling? What are the needs as we shift to re-entry?

• Chad d’Entremont, Executive Director, The Rennie Center for Education Research & Policy: The Back-to-School Blueprint: How can we apply research-based practices and strategies to support students this school year?

• Maureen Binienda, Superintendent, Worcester Public Schools Worcester MA: Re-Entry and Re-Imagination: What will be the same and what will be different with respect to teaching, learning, and social and emotional supports?


In Solidarity with our Asian American & Pacific Islander Communities

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The Worcester Education Collaborative stands in solidarity with our Asian American and Pacific Islander communities. 

Our commitment:

Education is the work of preparing children for the future and is central in fostering and sustaining a democratic society. 

Patterns of violence and inequity assault the conscience. They remind us of the importance of pursuing our vision to realize a robust multi-racial, multicultural nation by ensuring equity in our schools and community. 

WEC is committed to the hard, ongoing, and critical work of preparing Worcester’s young people for a future in which that vision is realized.

#StopAAPIHate #communitytogether #education 


WEC is now hiring!

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WEC is excited to announce that we are now hiring an Assistant Director to lead the development and implementation of Woo-Labs and the community’s vision to establish a robust network of student-centered, project-based learning activities across Worcester’s rich and diverse out-of-school learning community.

In collaboration with WEC’s Executive Director and Deputy Director, as well Woo-Labs partners and community stakeholders, the Assistant Director will develop and manage all Woo-Labs activities, including but not limited to planning, implementation, communication, coordination, evaluation, and reporting...

Read the full job description HERE to learn more about:

• The Worcester Education Collaborative

• Project Background: Woo-Labs

• Position Summary: Assistant Director

• Preferred Competencies, Preferred Knowledge, Skills & Experiences

• Salary & Benefits

• Required Application Materials

All application materials are due by April 5th, 2021. Please email Julia Kilgore (@Jkilgore@wecollaborative.org).


WEC was awarded a Worcester Together Reimagining Grant!

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Thank you to all of the community partners on this project! We are excited and inspired by our collective response to pressing challenges related to education and student well-being in Worcester.

Woo-Labs convened by the Worcester Education Collaborative was just awarded a $250,000 grant from the Worcester Together Fund. More information about Woo-Labs and next steps… are coming soon!

Press Release by the Greater Worcester Community Foundation & the United Way of Central Massachusetts

‘Worcester Together’ Announces $1 Million in Reimagining Phase Funding

 WORCESTER, MA – The Worcester Together fund recently announced $1 million in Reimagining Grants to six local nonprofits. A joint effort between the Greater Worcester Community Foundation and the United Way of Central Massachusetts, and in close partnership with the City of Worcester, Worcester Together has provided over $10.6 million in the last year to Central Massachusetts nonprofits working to help families facing issues such as lost income, unstable housing, food insecurity, and more. The Reimagining Grants are the Fund’s final phase of grant making.

“Worcester Together’s Reimagining grants were designed to encourage local leaders to step back from the immediate consequences of a social issue and address the root causes. The scale of these grants, at over $100,000 each, will position organizations to make lasting and fundamental changes,” said GWCF President and CEO Barbara Fields.

“COVID-19 has highlighted many of the community inequities and service gaps we have known existed for a long time,” said United Way President and CEO Tim Garvin. “As we approach the one year mark of the pandemic, we envision this last round of funding as helping the region’s non-profits operate at an even more effective level and build an even better future for our community.” 

The six organizations were chosen for their unique approach to tackling some of Central Massachusetts’ most critical challenges. These include access to newborn and maternal health care, increasing youth civic engagement, expanding quality educational programming, and addressing food insecurity.

The six organizations and their selected projects are:

Legendary Legacies, Inc.: $125,000

Creating a youth-led civic engagement academy to increase voter registration and turnout among 18-25 year olds.

Pernet Family Health Service: $150,000

Providing in-home neonatal visits for all Worcester parents.

Regional Environmental Council: $125,000

Improve food security by increasing utilization of federal and state programs designed to help residents purchase local produce

Together for Kids Coalition: $175,000

Establishing an early childhood care coordinated system.

Worcester Community Action Council: $175,000

Delivery of services in Southbridge and surrounding communities.

Worcester Education Collaborative: $250,000

Improving access to and quality of out-of-school time programs.

“COVID-19 has exacerbated the barriers that many face in accessing services and stabilizing benefits, such as to healthy food, rental assistance and access to good jobs,” said Marybeth Campbell of Worcester Community Action Council. “With our Reimagining Grant from Worcester Together, we will help more residents break the cycle of poverty by providing a place-based model for coordinated care, connecting all of the providers, leveraging resources, referrals and interventions in order to achieve a better result for everyone.” 

“Worcester has long been plagued by disparities and inadequacies in our K-12 public education system,” said Jennifer Davis Carey of Worcester Education Collaborative. “Our Reimagining Grant will make it possible to ensure afterschool and out-of-school programs are widely accessible and of the highest quality for all.”

“In the past year, young people used their voices to speak out for social change in record numbers, yet less than five hundred 18-25-year-olds in Worcester voted in the 2019 Municipal election,” said Ron Waddell of Legendary Legacies. We know that the greatest impact on the political process happens at the local level, so with our Reimagining Grant, we will establish a youth-led Civic Engagement Academy. We know that peer-designed programming and activities are key to boosting interest and engagement in the political process.”

Learn more about Worcester Together and Reimagining Grants here.

About the Greater Worcester Community Foundation

Greater Worcester Community Foundation (GWCF) is central Massachusetts’ leading community foundation dedicated to improving the quality of life in the region by connecting donors to high impact nonprofits and community partners. The Foundation employs its expertise and resources to address the region’s most urgent needs. Since 1975, GWCF has worked with donors to build a $179 million endowment and each year awards more than $7 million in grants and scholarships to help build a stronger and more vibrant region.  For more information, please visit www.greaterworcester.org

About the United Way of Central Massachusetts

Every day, The United Way of Central Massachusetts works to improve the community and break the cycle of poverty. Our donors and supporters contribute $5 million each year, which gets invested into programs and initiatives with a proven track record of results. Our programs are aligned with our strategic goals: Education, Family Stability, and Health and Safety Net. Our entire community benefits when the most vulnerable members of our community find a way out of crisis, children are able to learn, people are healthy, and parents earn enough money to support a stable family. For more information on The United Way of Central Massachusetts programs and how to give, please visit www.unitedwaycm.org