New Jersey

New Jersey Affiliate

Through the support and leadership of the Business Coalition for Educational Excellence (BCEE) at the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce and the New Jersey Department of Education, Just for the Kids-New Jersey is driving school improvement across the state. Leadership and funding from the New Jersey business community including Prudential Financial, Merck Institute for Science Education, Wal-Mart, Washington Mutual and the members of the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce, are helping to make this a reality. For a complete list of sponsoring organizations click here.

Contact:
Dana Egreczky
President, BCEE

For additional information on becoming a Just for the Kids state affiliate, click here.

New Executive Summary of the 2005 New Jersey Best Practice Study

Welcome to the Just for the Kids - New Jersey, a school information Web site that provides actionable data and practices proven best in raising academic achievement and closing achievement gaps at all grade levels.

Since its inception in 1995, Just for the Kids' primary focus has been helping find and fulfill every school's potential for reaching excellence in student achievement. JFTK services and tools have been created to support school systems that accept the challenge of preparing ALL students for college and skilled careers. The JFTK strategy toward achieving excellence is embodied in three basic steps:

Step 1 - Inform: Analyze your school's achievement potential using Just for the Kids' consistency, opportunity gap and growth reports based on your state's academic test results

Step 2 - Inspire: Learn and compare your practices to those of consistently higher performers using the interactive Framework of Best Practices

Step 3 - Improve: Apply what you've learned in Steps 1 and 2 toward intentional and targeted improvement planning and implementation

Just for the Kids tools and services first became available for New Jersey in 2003 and currently include 2006 Just for the Kids School Reports for elementary, middle, and high schools. New Jersey-based researchers have also studied Consistently Higher Performing Elementary Schools (2005) with the findings available through the NCEA Best Practice Framework.