Speaker: Bill Milliken

From Programs to Relationships: Addressing Drop-outs through Communities in Schools

It’s relationships, not programs, that change children. – Bill Milliken 

From street corners in Harlem to the halls of national policy, Bill Milliken’s lifetime of service has been guided by one simple belief: every child deserves someone who won’t give up on them. As the founder of Communities In Schools (CIS)—America’s largest dropout prevention organization—Milliken has spent over six decades turning that belief into a national movement. 

Back in the 1960s, when education reforms barely looked beyond the "3 Rs"—reading, writing, and arithmetic—Milliken shifted the conversation to something more fundamental: the role of community in creating the conditions every student needs to thrive. 

Even today, nearly 1 in 3 students drop out—not because they can’t learn, but because of non-academic barriers: trauma, mental and physical health challenges, hunger, homelessness. Acton lost his father to violence in the second grade. Rasheedah became pregnant at 14. Robert struggled through his parents’ painful divorce. 

Everyone knows that it takes a village to raise a child. But who gathers the village? And what holds it together? Traditional supports may exist, but are fragmented, difficult to access, and too impersonal to truly heal. 

CIS is showing the way: it surrounded Acton, Rasheeda, and Robert with an ecosystem of caring adults, vital services, and steady support, right where they needed it most: inside their schools. As a result, those young lives didn’t fall through the cracks. They overcame the odds and flourished. Today, CIS supports 2 million students and their families each year, including intensive one-on-one support for 200,000 high-risk students—all embedded directly within 3,460 schools across 27 US states

But Bill’s insight didn’t come from research or policy papers – it was borne of personal, embodied experience. Growing up in 1950s Pennsylvania, he struggled with an undiagnosed learning difficulty, was labeled “dumb,” and rebelled to mask deep loneliness. His life took a U-turn at a pool cafe when a “caring adult” (from Young Life, an ecumenical youth organization) with what he calls “magic eyes” offered him a game of pool and began to take an interest in his life. In his book, The Last Dropout, Bill recounts, “They didn’t offer us an 'answer' or a 'program' —“they offered themselves; they offered the time, love, and energy it takes to form a relationship with another human being. And there’s no human being harder to relate to than an alienated teenager.”    

That simple act of presence saved Bill’s life. In time, he chose to do the same and pay it forward. Unable to stick through college due to learning difficulties, he spent his days on Harlem’s basketball courts. He wasn’t good at shooting hoops, but what mattered the most was being there. If I had a degree”, he jokes, “it would be in hanging out...But that was exactly what was missing in the lives of those young people." By building positive relationships with them, he and his friends were able to help them get off drugs, off the streets, and back in school. 

Bill’s experiences with “street academies” led him to search for a comprehensive approach to helping young people, culminating in the Communities in Schools network in the 1970s, where he served as President until May 2004. Rather than inventing new programs, it reimagined how existing community resources could be woven directly into schools in a much more personal, accountable, and coordinated way. The result was a scalable and sustainable model that could effectively serve millions without losing its grounding in care. In 2022–23, 99% of students in CIS programs remained enrolled through the end of the year, and 97% were promoted to the next grade. What’s even more striking is that this was achieved at an average annual cost of just $188 per student to connect them with the support they needed, delivering $11.60 in economic benefit to the community for every dollar invested.

A quiet defining thread throughout Bill’s journey has been his faith—first kindled through Young Life, and later deepened by his encounter with Clarence Jordan, a peanut farmer and Bible scholar who led Koinonia, a communal farm rooted in Christian values. Bill was profoundly influenced by Clarence’s focus on justice, compassion, and inner change—an experience he described as “like hearing the Christian message for the first time.” Inspired, he and a few friends embraced communal living as a way to practice peace, fellowship, and shared responsibility.

Now in his eighties, Bill has served or advised three U.S. presidential administrations and has received numerous honors for his commitment to young people, including the Martin Luther King Jr. Legacy Award, the GSV Lifetime Achievement Award, and the Jefferson Award for Public Service (considered the “Nobel Prize” for U.S. community and public service). In addition to The Last Dropout (reissued in 2022), he’s also authored three other books: From the Rearview Mirror, So Long, Sweet Jesus, and Tough Love

Join us for an Awakin Call with this gentle visionary whose life reminds us that real change begins with presence, proximity, and care.   


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