Department of Defense Dependents Schools

Department of Defense Dependents Schools

The Department of Defense Dependents Schools (DoDDS) are a network of schools, both primary and secondary, that serve dependents of United States military - and other non-US - personnel outside the United States. The schools themselves are operated by the Department of Defense Education Activity (DoDEA). This school system, wholly located outside the country, is the tenth largest American school system.

Contents


History

DoDDS started operating schools October 14, 1946 for the children of military overseas. The intent was to ensure an American educational experience for the American student. Therefore the children, teachers, and educational program were and are American. It then cost $10 to enroll a child ($112 in 2010 dollars). The schools would get operational funds from profits made by Class VI stores (alcohol). It now can cost as much as $20,000 for enrollment for non-Command Sponsored military families, or Command Sponsored Contractors, and increases approximately $800 annually.

There were 38 elementary schools and 5 high schools in 1946. In 2011 there were 120 schools. There are two high schools out of the original five still in operation, Heidelberg High School in Heidelberg, Germany and Kubasaki High School on Okinawa, Japan.

The tenth largest American school system is outside of the United States. In 1946, the Department of Defense Dependent Schools was created for dependents of military members of the armed forces in overseas areas. [1] After World War II, the increased demand for American education overseas was a result of the government's decision to allow soldiers to bring their families when deployed.[2]

Operations

All schools in the DoDDS system operate outside of the States of the United States and the District of Columbia. There are also some schools that operate on military installations within the United States, but those are grouped in a separate organization within DoDEA, the Department of Defense Domestic Dependent Elementary and Secondary Schools (DDESS). DoDDS has superintendents for two districts: Europe and Pacific. The DoDDS Pacific schools are, for the most part, in the Far East on installations in South Korea and Japan. Schools on military bases in Guam are under DDESS jurisdiction, but are administered by DoDDS Pacific (presumably for administrative convenience). Turkish DoDDS schools are served by the European branch. Schools on the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba fall under the jurisdiction of DoDDS, but are administered by DDESS. Schools on bases in Puerto Rico are under DDESS.

Although the schools are primarily dependents of military personnel, U.S. government employees are allowed to enroll their children in the schools on a space-available basis. As all of these schools are situated overseas, a concerted effort is made to immerse the children in the local color. Language and culture courses are offered as early as elementary school, while advanced language courses and opportunities to intimately view the culture of the student's host nation are offered throughout high school.

DoDDS schools operate with two structures in terms of grade levels:

  • The old American standard, in which elementary schools run from kindergarten to sixth grade while high school serves seventh through twelfth graders.
  • A newer standard, adopted by some DoDDS facilities in the 1970s, in which kindergarten to 3rd-5th grade students attend elementary school, post-elementary students up to 8th grade attend middle school, and 9th through 12th graders attend high school.

As a result of IDEA 2004, students with special education disabilities attend schools within DoDDS. These students are in pre-K (preschool or early childhood) through high school. The infants-toddlers special education program exists overseas on USA military bases, though not coordinated through DoDDS. School psychologists are directly employed by DoDDS and civilian employed clinical child psychologists are employed by the USA military to provide direct and indirect services to students with special needs. Not all levels of special education services are available at all schools and base locations.

DoDDS range from Kindergarten to 12th grade, and some Universities are accredited by the Department of Defense.[3]

Environmental changes

While there are typical environmental changes that may affect any child's educational performance such as divorce, and relocation, there are some that are systemic with military children. Relocation is frequent and parents may be deployed from home.

A study was done focusing on parental absences during the time of the military deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan within the 2002 to 2005 time period. The study reports the adverse effects of deployment especially with long deployments or deployments that occur during the month of academic testing. Effects can continue and can be detrimental for children's academic achievements.[4]

Moving can affect students. They leave old friends and make new ones. Military children have been described as resilient.[5]

Districts

For the European branch of DoDDS, there are 5 districts:

The Pacific branch, officially DoDDS-Pacific/DDESS-Guam, has three DoDDS districts and one DDESS district:

  • Korea District — Headquartered in Seoul - 11 schools
  • Japan District — Headquartered at Yokota Air Base - 21 schools
  • Okinawa District — Headquartered at Kadena Air Base - 13 schools
  • DDESS: Guam District — Headquartered at Andersen Air Force Base - 4 schools

Schools

Miscellaneous

The Kaiserslautern District has the most DoDDS schools worldwide, until the Heidelberg District closes and all schools in the district will be handed over to the Bavaria District. The Kaiserslautern District serves over 5,000 students. Although schools are being eliminated, a number of schools are still operating normally.

Bases such as Heidelberg, Kaiserslautern, Wiesbaden, and Ramstein Air Base in Germany; Vicenza American High School, Naples and Aviano in Italy; Lakenheath in England; Incirlik in Turkey; and Okinawa, SHAPE, and Rota in other areas are the most commonly known ones.

Starting the 2007/2008 school year, Kaiserslautern High School was be combined with the neighboring elementary school. Students from Landstuhl Middle School and other students living in select areas were redistricted to Kaiserslautern starting with school year 2008-2009. Current elementary students will attend Vogelweh Elementary. Therefore, KHS's student population will increase from 650 students to about 900.


For every sports season, the schools compete in the DoDDS Championship, held at various locations.

See also


External links

Notes

  1. ^ Derrick, William M. The Phi Delta Kappan: Vol. 42, No. 2 (Nov., 1960), pp. 55-57."Department of Defense Dependent Schools",Published by: Phi Delta Kappa International.<http://www.jstor.org/stable/20342500>.
  2. ^ <http://education.stateuniversity.com/pages/1762/American-Overseas-Schools.html>.
  3. ^ Piccoli,Sean. "Military brats: Life on the go;HAILING FROM NOWHERE, GROWING UP FROM EVERYWHERE" The Washington Times. Part E; LIFE; Pg. E1. LexisNexis Academic.Web. 21 Feb. 2011.
  4. ^ Engel, Rozlyn C., Luke B. Gallagher, and David S. Lyle. "Military deployments and children's academic achievement: Evidence from Department of Defense Education Activity Schools." Economics of Education Review 29.1 (2010): 73-82. Academic Search Complete. EBSCO. Web. 21 Feb. 2011.
  5. ^ Hardy, Lawrence. "When Kids Lose Parents in Our War in Iraq." Education Digest 72.4 (2006): 10-12. Academic Search Complete. EBSCO. Web. 21 Feb. 2011.

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