assisting easily overlooked students: undocumented foster youth & unaccompanied homeless...

25
MASFAA 2013 October 6 th – 9 th , 2013 Indianapolis, Indiana Assisting Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented Foster Youth & Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

Upload: catrin

Post on 23-Feb-2016

61 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Assisting Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented Foster Youth & Unaccompanied Homeless Youth. Presenters. Mark Delorey, Western Michigan University Barbara Duffield, NAEHCY Cyekeia Lee, NAEHCY. Best Practices Discussion. A little bit from us A little bit from you. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

MASFAA 2013October 6th – 9th, 2013Indianapolis, Indiana

Assisting Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented

Foster Youth & Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

Page 2: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

Presenters Mark Delorey, Western Michigan

University Barbara Duffield, NAEHCY Cyekeia Lee, NAEHCY

2

Page 3: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

3

Best Practices Discussion A little bit from us

A little bit from you

Page 4: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

4

“Shirt-sleeve” Definitions Undocumented: not a U.S. citizen or

permanent resident. Lacks paperwork

Foster youth: removed from their parents as the result of abuse or neglect

Unaccompanied Homeless Youth: Under 22, not living with parents, lacking fixed-adequate-regular housing

Page 5: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

5

Three Groups What do they have in common? What are the differences? Are the groups distinct?

Page 6: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

6

Undocumented Plyler v. Doe: education for all K-12 14th Amendment: Equal protection

for “all persons”

Page 7: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

7

Undocumented Not eligible for federal (or state?) aid State resident tuition at state

schools?(California, Colorado, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Kansas, Maryland, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, Oklahoma, Oregon, Rhode Island, Texas, Utah, and Washington) Private aid search

Page 8: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

8

Undocumented

Some schools…• Charge resident tuition without state

requirement – Board approval• Deny admission • Do not award any institutional aid• Provide considerable institutional and

private funding

Page 9: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

9

UndocumentedDevelopment, Relief, & Education for Alien Minors

(DREAM Act)

• Original sponsors Hatch & Durbin in 2001• NOT yet passed, ONLY 57 votes in senate• Path to citizenship • Financial aid eligibility

Page 10: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

10

Undocumented

Delayed Action for Childhood Arrivals

• DACA• Entered the U.S. before turning 16,

etc.• Executive order in June, 2012• Work permit and Social Security Card

Page 11: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

11

Undocumented

DACA continued…..

• Drivers licenses• Safe from deportation• Not Title IV aid eligible• Not a clear path to citizenship

Page 12: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

12

Undocumented

What’s next?

• On our campuses• In the U.S.

Page 13: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

13

Undocumented

What are you doing that is working well?

Page 14: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

14

Foster Care Alums Removed from the care of their

parentsand…

Refugees granted asylumand…

Victims of human trafficking – T Visa

Page 15: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

15

Foster Care Alums Western Michigan University Seita

Scholars

◊ Full tuition scholarship◊ 35 – 1 ratio of full time “campus

coaches” ◊ Extensive University and community

support

Page 16: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

16

Foster Care Alums Education & Training Voucher Refugee Education Training Voucher

◊ $4,000 to $5,000 annually◊ Federal Chaffee Funding from HHS◊ Gen 13-18: Extended Foster Care

Payments• Not counted as resource or as untaxed

income

Page 17: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

17

Foster Care Alums

What are you doing that is working well?

Page 18: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

18

Unaccompanied Homeless Youth(UHY)

Automatic Independent status

U = Not in the presence of their parents

and… H = Lacking fixed - adequate -

regular housingand…

Y = 21 and younger

Page 19: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

19

Unaccompanied Homeless Youth(UHY)

Determination is made by:◊ School district homeless liaison

or…◊ Director of a homeless shelter

or…◊ Director of a runaway shelter

or…◊ FAO

Page 20: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

20

UHY

Crucial points to understand: This is NOT a PJ, dependency

override Verification isn’t required (conflicting

info) DETERMINATION not a DECISION No valid reason to ask “Why?”

Page 21: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

21

UHY If we could ask why:

◊ Physical, sexual, emotional, substance abuse

◊ Sexual orientation, pregnancy◊ Moving and can’t bring you with me (us)◊ Shelter can’t accommodate teens, boys◊ Other…..

Page 22: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

NAEHCY Resources

NAEHCY Higher Education Hotline:855-446-2673

http://www.naehcy.org Cyekeia Lee, Higher Education Liaison, [email protected] FAFSA Tips for Unaccompanied Youth Without Stable Housing Helping Unaccompanied Homeless Youth Access College

Financial Aid Brief Unaccompanied Homeless Youth Toolkits, FAFSA Week:http://naehcy.org/tk/cl.html

Page 23: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

23

UHY

What are you doing that is working well?

Page 24: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

24

Common Needs Understanding, compassion Go the extra mile, and then a little

further Help students find resources on

campus Recognize that trust may be difficult

Page 25: Assisting  Easily Overlooked Students: Undocumented  Foster Youth &  Unaccompanied Homeless Youth

25

Closing Thought

“Too often we underestimate the power of a touch, a smile, a kind word, a listening ear, or the smallest act of caring, all of which have the potential to turn a life around.”

― Leo Buscaglia