Communities In Schools:
A
Newfoundland
School and Community
Outreach in Need of Stability
Barbara Barter
University
of Victoria
and
Memorial
University
of Newfoundland and
Labrador
Abstract
Communities In Schools (CIS) was introduced to Cormack Trail School District
in 1991. Using a whole-school philosophy it offers non-targeted programming to
all children through the building of community-based partnerships and community
involvement. The purpose of this article is to explore what participants said
about their work with CIS: where they worked, what they did, what they liked
about their work, what they disliked, their perceptions of barriers and
supports, and their suggestions for positive growth. The field texts derive from
three main sources: interviews with four CIS workers and one principal;
documents and reports used as part of the reporting mechanism required by
funding agencies and partners for both CIS and its parent organization
(Community Education Networks) and minutes from principals’ meetings; and
personal correspondence with the Director of Community Education Networks and
the District Coordinator for Communities In Schools. Results indicate that true
community involvement in schools can exist and is of benefit to the education of
children, but that challenges related to time frames, salaries, and employees’
roles and expectations tied to government agency requirements need to be taken
into consideration.

Copyright © AJER, the Faculty of Education, and the University
of Alberta, 2008.
Last revised: February 7, 2008.
Designed by G.H. Buck