“No one will say it, but shelters have become a surrogate for low-income housing in America,” said Ralph da Costa Nuñez, president of the New York City-based think tank Institute for Children and Poverty.…
Audiences: General Public
Parent Herald: Homeless Students Across US Increasing? Recent Statistics Reveal New York Has The Second Largest Homeless Student Population In America
According to the data released by the Institute for Children, Poverty and Homelessness (ICPH), there are more than 116,700 homeless students in the state of New York and 83 percent of them live in urban centers up- and downstate.…
Dropout Nation: Homeless Children’s Lives Matter
Thirty-six percent of homeless children attending New York City’s public schools were chronically absent (or missing more than 18 days of the school year) in 2013-2014, according to a study by the Institute for Children, Poverty & Homelessness.…
Huffington Post: Comprehensive Vision On Homelessness Is Already Here
“A comprehensive vision is precisely what is needed—comprehensive enough to include educational supports, mental health services, job training and other on-site shelter services to put, and keep, families in their own homes.”…
New York Times: New York Charters Enroll Fewer Homeless Pupils Than City Schools
According to a report on New York City from the Institute for Children, Poverty and Homelessness, a policy research organization, students in temporary housing are nearly twice as likely to be chronically absent — meaning they miss at least 20 days of school — as students who are not homeless.…
LSE US Centre: Nonprofit housing dispersal strategies to help the homeless can increase quality of life when placed in diverse and more affluent communities
Studies continue to show that “where you live and where children grow up matters”. It seems that geography matters more to children in poor or very-low income families. The philosophy that living in a more affluent area influences the level of income a person has, and this appears to be widely similar across metropolitan areas in the United States.…
Education Dive: New York’s homeless pulled between shelter and school
… a report from the Institute for Children, Poverty & Homelessness found the stability of staying in one shelter for all four years of high school can lead to graduation rates nearly on par with low-income students in regular housing.…
The Atlantic: Why Homeless Kids Can’t Get to School
Another recent report, by the New York City-based Institute for Children, Poverty & Homelessness (ICPH), found that more than 127,000 New York City public-school students—or one in eight—have been homeless at some point in the last five school years.…
Mango’s Quest
Mango’s Quest tells the tale of a young, orange-colored hamster who must leave his safe and warm cage in Room 222.…
Mango’s Quest Activity Book
Join Mango in his search for a home of his own! This activity book is the companion to Mango’s Quest.…
Think Progress: The Homeless Crisis in New York City’s Schools
More than 100,000 New York City students are homeless this academic year, according to an analysis by the Institute for Children, Poverty & Homelessness (ICPH). That’s an increase of 22 percent over the year before — a jump that is ‘unprecedented,’ Jennifer Erb-Downward, principal policy analyst at ICPH, told ThinkProgress.…
Homelessness is …
Homelessness is a women’s issue, an early childhood issue, a teen pregnancy issue, a domestic violence issue, and a criminal justice issue.…