Boston Coaching for Completion A Social Innovation Fund Initiative. Request for Proposals: Postsecondary Access/Success Landscape Audit

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Overview Boston Coaching for Completion A Social Innovation Fund Initiative Request for Proposals: Postsecondary Access/Success Landscape Audit Deadline Extended: Monday, August 1, 2016 The Boston Foundation (TBF) is pleased to release this competitive Request for Proposals (RFP) for an audit of the college access and success landscape in Boston to generate a comprehensive inventory of all local resources that support students to successfully prepare for, apply to, and complete education beyond high school. Success Boston is Boston s citywide college completion partnership that seeks to double the college completion rate for students. Boston Coaching for Completion (BosC4C) is an initiative supported through the federal Social Innovation Fund (SIF) to build upon and expand Success Boston s efforts to increase the postsecondary completion rates of Boston s public high school graduates by scaling up the transition coaching intervention, which pairs coaches with students through their first 2 years of postsecondary education. The purpose of this RFP is to seek out qualified firms for the design, research, and assessment of Boston s college access and success resources. There is limited understanding of the full range of resources, programs, services, and opportunities that exist in Boston to support students' college access, persistence, and success. To narrow this knowledge gap, this audit of services and supports that enable Boston students to achieve postsecondary success will prove invaluable in informing the future work and collaboration of organizations to further enhance college success outcomes. The goal for this study is to not only identify existing programs and resources, but to also identify areas where there are gaps and/or duplication and draw attention to areas for additional focus, research, and investment. College access refers to the field occupied by organizations working to ensure that all students graduate from high school with the ability to enter college and successfully obtain a degree. By working with students and their families, college access programs address academic preparedness, college aspiration and knowledge, and financial barriers that keep underrepresented students from entering college set up to succeed. Providing access to counseling, social services, academic support, and other resources can help students who are at College Access & Success Landscape Audit RFP 1

risk of failure or dropping out remain in school, succeed academically, graduate with a diploma, and pursue postsecondary education. Relatedly, college readiness is the level of preparation a student needs to enroll and succeed without remediation in a credit-bearing general education course at a postsecondary institution. Factors such as race, religion, gender, sexual orientation, disability, perceived intellectual ability, past academic performance, special-education status, English-language ability, and family income or educational-attainment levels in addition to factors such as relative community affluence, geographical location, or school facilities may contribute to certain students having less access to educational opportunities than other students. College success is a related field, occupied by organizations that support underrepresented students to complete college once they are enrolled. Strategies or policies designed to remove institutional disincentives, impediments, or barriers to academic success, whether intentional or unintentional, or to provide the resources, social services, and academic support that certain students may need to succeed in school play a major role in achieving educational equity. Thus, we are keenly interested in all programs that provide additional services or remove any actual or potential barriers that might prevent some students from equitable participation in certain courses or academic programs. The findings and recommendations that result from this audit will help inform the ways in which educational institutions and policies should ensure that students have equal and equitable opportunities to take full advantage of their education. The selected firm will lead and facilitate this audit, seeing the project through to successful completion with the publication and release of a report outlining key findings and recommendations. The Boston Foundation seeks to contract with a firm to provide the services detailed in this RFP, and will award a contract to the selected firm, which must comply with all federal guidelines, financial reporting, and regulatory requirements. The deadline for proposals is Monday, August 1, 2016. Please see details on submission below. College Access & Success Landscape Audit RFP 2

BACKGROUND: Social Innovation Fund, The Boston Foundation, Success Boston, & Boston Coaching for Completion Social Innovation Fund The Social Innovation Fund (SIF), a program of the Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS), is a powerful approach to transforming lives and communities that utilizes federal investment as a catalyst for impact mobilizing public and private resources to find and grow community solutions with evidence of strong results. By fostering private and public collaborations that identify, evaluate and expand promising nonprofits and interventions, the SIF increases access to effective programs that enable people and communities in need to overcome their most pressing challenges in the areas of economic opportunity, youth development, and health. Learn more at www.nationalservice.gov/programs/social-innovationfund. The Boston Foundation Founded in 1915, the Boston Foundation is one of the oldest and largest community foundations in the nation. TBF devotes its resources to building and sustaining a vital, prosperous city and region, where justice and opportunity are extended to everyone. TBF s work is guided by two main strategic goals that reflect a deep commitment to strengthening communities: 1) Greater Boston residents are successful and thriving, and 2) Greater Boston communities are vibrant, safe and affordable. When a pressing community issue is not being adequately addressed, TBF may launch an initiative to fill the gap and drive deeper impact towards defined, strategic outcomes. Decisions to launch such efforts are informed by data and research, and typically involve partnerships with community agencies and other funders. Success Boston is one such evidence-based, data-driven initiative. Success Boston A cross-sector collaboration between TBF, the City of Boston, BPS, nonprofit organizations and local institutions of higher education, Success Boston is dedicated to dramatically increasing the number of BPS graduates, particularly low-income, first-generation students of color, who earn a postsecondary credential. The goal of Success Boston is to achieve a 70% six-year postsecondary completion rate for college enrollees from the Boston Public Schools high school Class of 2011 and beyond. To achieve this ambitious goal, Success Boston employs a cross-sector partnership and strategies rooted in mutual accountability, based on student-level outcomes data, to significantly change the postsecondary trajectory of Boston s high school graduates. The initiative is convened by Mayor Martin J. Walsh, and co-chaired by Boston Foundation President Paul S. Grogan; Boston Public Schools Superintendent Tommy Chang; Chair of the Private College Access & Success Landscape Audit RFP 3

Industry Council, Kenneth C. Montgomery; President of Bunker Hill Community College Pam Eddinger; and UMass Boston Chancellor Keith Motley. Success Boston s Getting Ready, Getting In, Getting Through framework includes specific strategies and goals to improve students academic preparation and their transition into college, as well as the as-needed supports provided through higher education institutions until students successfully attain a degree. Recently, the co-chairs of Success Boston added Getting Connected, to the framework, to ensure that, in everything the initiative undertakes, there is a sustained focus on helping young people connect to the workforce. A key programmatic intervention of Success Boston has been the development and implementation of the transition coaching model to support high school graduates as they enroll in and navigate through postsecondary education. Beginning with the BPS Class of 2009, Success Boston has coached an annual cohort of approximately 300 students from each graduating class who are headed to local colleges and universities with transition coaches from nonprofit partner organizations. These coaches support students in the transition from high school to postsecondary and through at least their first two years of college, providing mentorship and assistance navigating college demands, as well as help accessing financial aid and other advising services. An analysis by Dr. Andrew Sum at Northeastern University s Center for Labor Market Studies found that students with Success Boston coaches had higher annual college persistence rates than a matched comparison group. Students from the BPS Class of 2009 who received coaching experienced 20 percentage point gains in year-to-year persistence rates compared to their nonparticipating peers. Even greater gains were observed in year two persistence rates. Black and Hispanic Success Boston participants experienced the most dramatic gains. For a full report on findings, please see Getting Closer to the Finish Line: The College Enrollment and Completion Experiences of Graduates of the Boston Public Schools. Preliminary evidence from subsequent classes suggests that the impact of coaching is sustained across class years. Boston Coaching for Completion Boston Coaching for Completion is an initiative supported through the Social Innovation Fund that will build on and expand Success Boston s efforts to raise the post-secondary completion rates of Boston s graduates by scaling up the transition coaching intervention. Beginning in 2015, BosC4C expanded transition coaching to serve 1,000 students per year, with an intentional focus on the most in-need populations, including first generation and low-income students, underrepresented students of color, and students attending community colleges. College Access & Success Landscape Audit RFP 4

Scope of Work The Boston Foundation seeks to contract with a firm for an audit of the postsecondary access and success landscape in Boston, including college and career and technical options available to all students, including students in the Boston Public Schools, other school types, and adults. The final product should include the audit (described below) and a set of recommendations based on the audit s findings related to Boston s strengths, weaknesses, and areas for improvement. Recommendations should note perceived areas of duplication as well as areas of unmet needs (related to specific populations, neighborhoods, and school types). These recommendations should place the audit within the larger Success Boston framework of improving postsecondary success to strengthen the city s economy and create opportunity for young people. Audit Deliverables: Catalog Boston based local postsecondary access and success organizations, initiatives, individuals, and entities; Conduct a thorough inventory of the current system of programs, policies, partnerships, and supports available to students across the educational pipeline; Analyze challenges and opportunities within the college access and success system, and develop a set of recommendations. Potential Questions to inform the Recommendations: Who are the major players and organizations in the college access and success system, including key leaders, community-based providers, educational institutions, and other influential participants? What partnerships and/or forums are in place to coordinate and align the college access and success work, and how do they function? What programs and supports are in place with evidence-based impacts and success? What system reform efforts are underway? What are the challenges to improving the local college access/success system s performance? What are the opportunities to improve the system? Identify the effectiveness and efficiency gains that stem from enhanced local capacity and coordination College Access & Success Landscape Audit RFP 5

Proposal Submission and Deadline The Foundation requests proposals of up to 10 pages, including a proposal narrative, timeline, budget and budget narrative. In addition, the proposals should include CVs of key staff as appendices to the 10 page proposal. The selected organization must comply with all federal guidelines, financial reporting, and regulatory requirements. Interested parties should submit written proposals of up to ten single-spaced pages, including contact information and a project budget by email to sif@tbf.org no later than 5:00 p.m. on Monday, August 1, 2016. Proposals should include methodology/approach, timeline, budget, budget narrative, and a description of the firm s qualifications/expertise. In addition, please provide brief description(s) of similar successful projects, as well as the CVs outlining the relevant experience of staff who will be assigned to this project. Methodology: The proposal should describe a methodology that will audit the full range of service and support programs and providers, including in-school and out-of-school programs, K12 and higher education (college access/planning, bridge programs, scholarship programs, transition coaching models, college success programming, specialized college access programs, placement test prep programs, dual-enrollment programs, etc. ) Proposed methodologies should include a description of the firm s knowledge gathering plan, and should include convenings with stakeholders through interviews and focus groups to gather direct feedback and information about local postsecondary success efforts underway. The methodology should also describe how the firm will use the completed audit as a planning tool to develop the recommendations. Finally, the methodology should include a timeline that identifies key milestones. Budget: The proposal should include a project budget of no more than $125,000, and should be accompanied by a project narrative that describes in detail the proposed budget categories. Qualifications: Proposals should describe your understanding of postsecondary access and success programming and/or experience in conducting landscape audits and research. The Boston Foundation will evaluate proposals and contact selected applicants for a follow-up conversation and clarifying information, to explore the project in greater detail prior to making a final decision. The Boston Foundation is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Diversity firms are encouraged to apply. Please contact Eric Esteves, Social Innovation Fund Director, with questions at (617) 338-4471 or Eric.Esteves@tbf.org. College Access & Success Landscape Audit RFP 6