Press

A New Year, a New JFYNetWorks

Ringing in the New YEarThe year 2011 was the most transformative in JFY’s history, culminating in our year-end move to 44 School Street from the Tremont Street building we had occupied for a decade and a half. Though only a two-block distance, the move signified a much longer journey in organizational evolution.

After long deliberation, the board decided to transfer our GED and ESOL programs to another agency. This was completed in 2011. We are preparing to do the same in 2012 with our environmental job training program. When the transition is complete, JFYNetWorks will be completely focused on JFYNet, our suite of online learning programs in high schools, middle schools, community agencies and community colleges. Raising the academic skills of our middle-school, high school and community college students is, in our judgment, the highest value-added contribution we can make to the development of a globally-competitive American workforce. Our methodology—bringing digital resources into schools and systematically building the capacity of teachers to use them effectively—has shown that it can produce measurable improvement in student learning by gradually transforming the practice of teaching.

The universal accessibility of online resources makes JFYNet scalable. This means that it can be grown to a size that can move the needle of student achievement statewide, regionally, and nationally. It is the only program we have ever developed that has this potential for truly population-scale outcomes. This is why we decided to concentrate our resources here.

Our decision to focus on digital instruction has both qualitative and quantitative components. Qualitatively, language and math skills are the most potent determinants of employability. The struggles of our public education system, and our steady decline in international student assessments, are well known. JFYNet’s targeted, assessment-driven online instruction has proven its effectiveness in raising student achievement as measured by the MCAS and gaining access to college by helping students pass the Accuplacer. Quantitatively, JFYNet has already reached more than 50,000 students and can easily double that number in the next few years. This impact far exceeds the magnitude attainable in any other program.

Two large-scale trends have shaped our development: globalization and government retrenchment. The globalization of markets has changed everything in the American economy. Whole industries, with their workforces, have disappeared, and the skill requirements for productive employment in the post-industrial economy have risen steadily. At the same time, government disinvestment in job training and other human services has made it impossible to sustain them.

No one can forecast with precision what the labor market will look like in five years, or even 12 months; but the one prediction that can be made is that education will be the basis of employability. We are confident that the re-focusing of our energies and resources on our highest-impact services offers the greatest possible return on investment.

JFY has been in operation since 1976. To say that much has changed in those 35 years is to state the obvious. Through those decades of social and economic change, JFY has gone through many adaptations to maintain relevance. We recalibrated our job training from low-skilled to high-skilled, and shifted our education from basic tutoring to GED and alternative high school and then to our current online blended learning. In making those adaptive changes we sometimes had to leave good programs behind. We have made those decisions on the basis of our assessment of how we could use our finite resources to produce the most valuable outcomes.

Adaptability is a core competency of successful organizations. The ability to shift resources from areas of lower return to areas of higher return is one of the definitions of entrepreneurship. As societies change, organizations that can read the changes and respond quickly survive. Those that can’t, that keep doing what they have been doing even though the market has dried up, don’t survive. JFY has survived for 35 years because its board and staff have understood that entrepreneurship is not just for start-ups. The discipline of continuous renewal is the foundation of long-term survival.

JFYNetWorks Awarded Empowerment Grant from Motorola Mobility Foundation

JFYNetWorks receives an Empowerment Grant from Motorola Mobility Foundation for work in Lowell. Empowering a student community through technology training. |
Boston, MA – Sept. 21, 2011 – JFYNetWorks has been awarded an Empowerment Grant from the Motorola Mobility Foundation towards the ACCUPLACER Readiness Instructional Program in Lowell. The grant recognizes the important work and mission of JFYNetWorks and will allow JFYNetWorks to continue to strengthen the local communities of Boston and beyond.

We are excited and honored to win an Empowerment Grant from the Motorola Mobility Foundation,” said Gary Kaplan, Executive Director. “These funds will enable our organization to further engage the students of Lowell with technology in an effort to enhance their lives.”

The Empowerment Grants support programs that leverage technology to build stronger communities and will provide non-profit organizations with funding to close the digital divide. Successful programs may include providing technology, and the skills needed to use it, for teachers, mentors and community leaders.

“The Empowerment Grants program is designed to help non-profits use new technologies, including digital media, to reach their mission and help strengthen communities,” said Eileen Sweeney, director of the Motorola Mobility Foundation. “I’d like to congratulate this group of non-profits who are exploring innovative ways to use emerging technologies to help solve serious social issues.”

City of Fitchburg receives JFYNet Award

Mayor Lisa Wong of Fitchburg was presented with the JFYNet Achievement Award for Corporate/Civic Partnership for Technology in Education at the Fitchburg School Committee meeting June 20. Intel Corporation was the co-recipient. Read More…

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North Shore Tech High School receives JFYNet Award

North Shore Technical High School was honored recently by JFYNetWorks in its annual awards ceremony at the State House. The JFYNet Achievement Award for Innovative University/High School Partnership was given to North Shore for its work with the MIT Office of Educational Innovation and Technology to bring advanced science software into the high school classroom. Read More…

JFYNetWorks Launches New Website

JFYNetWorks is excited to announce the launch of our new website!

Bostons Best Winter 2011

Digital Teaching for Digital Learners

It’s all about student achievement at JFYNetWorks.  Today’s students are the digital generation.  To compete for their attention, education has to meet them where they are – online.  JFYNet is a structured, blended e-learning program that gives teachers & students the digital tools & professional support they need to maximize learning.  Click here to read more…

Businesses asked to help with tech upgrades

Spencer New Leader

SPENCER – Local businesses could end up sponsoring up to $900,000 in technology upgrades at two Spencer schools under a plan proposed by a school official and one of the district’s curriculum providers.
Spencer-East Brookfield Superintendent of Schools Ralph Hicks said last week he and Gary Kaplan, executive director of JFYNetWorks in Boston, have met with leaders of five businesses to present their plans.  Click here to read more…

Training ‘opened a whole new world’

The Lowell Sun

Lowell – Gov. Deval Patrick wanted to see first-hand how his money was being spent.
 On a visit yesterday to JFYNetWorks, a Boston-based nonprofit job training firm that recently won a $200,000 grant from the state, Patrick was treated to a weatherization demonstration conducted by Steve Carr, JFY’s Building Science Trainer. Click here to read more…

Weathering Unemployment

The Lowell Sun

Local programs prepares individuals for careers in energy efficiency

Lowell – Tim Allen is a big, burly 25-year-old Lowell resident who knows plenty about hard core construction.  But since March 15th, Allen has been sitting behind a laptop six hours a day inside UMass Lowell’s Center for Family, Work, and Community at 600 Suffolk St., learning about such topics as heat conduction, blower door testing and thermal imagine.  Click here to read more…

Landing Green Jobs

Boston Herald

Two graduates of JFYNetWorks’ environmental technology training program, Ellery Sanchez of Malden, seated left, and Samuel Yawson of Revere, seated right, were hired earlier this month by the Conservation Services Group as energy auditors – the first graduates of the new program whose aim is to achieve a more diverse work force, says JFYNetWorks Executive Director Gary Kaplan, standing left.  Click here to read more…