Summer Opportunity Sessions
Summer Opportunity Sessions (SOS) demonstrate that intervention at an early
age is the most effective way to guide students through to graduation.
More than 640 Houston schoolchildren have been introduced to the
enriching aspects of education in a specially focused, four-week
summer program. SOS was created in response to Princeton research
studies. The research showed that children are at risk of losing
educational ground during the summer months. Research also indicated
that early intervention is most effective at producing educational
achievement later.
During the summer program, students acquire academic
skills in math and science in enriching and even entertaining experiences.
The program continues for them in following summers, increasing the
effectiveness of the learning. SOS instills good study habits while
stopping the "summer
learning slide" that may later lead to dropping out of school.
In the summer of 2008, SOS expanded to eight HISD elementary schools. Each of the five regions of the school district participated, and principals, teachers, parents, and students have felt the results. In 2008, student scores increased and average of 13% in math and 18% in science.
This program is a pilot of The Brookings Institution’s Hamilton
Project conducted by Princeton University’s Molly E. Fifer and Alan
B. Krueger.