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Title 1, Part A Under NCLB Jan, 2002

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Title: Title 1, Part A Under NCLB Jan, 2002


1
Title 1, Part A Under NCLB (Jan, 2002)
Part A - Improving the Academic
Achievement of the Disadvantaged
Part B Student Reading Skills Improvement
Part C Migrant Education Program
Part D Neglected and Delinquent

2
What is Title I, Part A
  • Federally funded compensatory grant to offset the
    effects of poverty on the educational
    opportunities of low-performing children in
    high-poverty schools

3
What Does This Mean inBibb County?
4
Bibb County DemographicsPoverty Status in 1999
  • Households
  • Income less than 10,000.. 15.1
  • 10,000 to 14,999 . 8.5
  • 15,000 to 24,999... 14.0
  • 37.6 of households in Bibb County have
  • a total annual income less than 25,000.
  • 70 of Bibb County students are eligible for free
    or reduced lunch

5
Educational AttainmentPopulation 25 years and
over
  • Bibb County population 25 years and over97,463
  • Less that 9th grade . 7.0
  • 9th to 12th , no diploma.. 15.8
  • High school graduate 31.7
  • (includes equivalency)

6
Bibb County DemographicsPoverty Status in 1999
  • 6,207 families in Bibb County have incomes below
    the poverty level.
  • 23.4 of these families have children under the
    age of 18
  • 29.7 of these families have children under the
    age of 5
  • 4,538 grandparents are primary caregivers for one
    or more grandchildren
  • 70 of Bibb County students are eligible for
    free or reduced lunch

7
Poverty Level in 2004
  • Percent of persons living below poverty level
    19.10
  • Size of Family Unit Poverty
    Threshold
  • One person under 65
    9,827
  • 65 years and over
    9,060
  • Two people under 65
    12,649
  • Two people 65 and older
    11,418
  • Three people
    14,776
  • Four people
    19,484
  • Five people
    23,497
  • Six people
    27,025

8
Federal Spending on K-12 Education under the
Elementary and Secondary Education Act and NAEP
Reading Scores (Age 9)
9
Purpose of Title I, Part A
  • To ensure that all children have the opportunity
    to obtain a high quality education and reach
    proficiency on challenging state academic
    standards and assessments.

10
Charge of NCLB
Close the achievement gap no
excuses 1965 to 2003 more than 242 billion
federal dollars spent to help educate
disadvantaged children Only 32 of
fourth-graders can read at a proficient level
based on NAEP NAEP-National Assessment of
Educational Progress
11
Title I, Part A under NCLB
  • Tightly narrows the focus
  • -Reading/English/Language Arts, Math and
    Science
  • Requires use of proven educational methods
  • Requires stronger accountability for results
  • Requires stronger accountability for targeted use
    of funds/personnel
  • Provides choices to parents of students in NI
    schools
  • Empowers parents as equal partners
  • - Remove barriers
  • - Build capacity of parents for quality
    parental
  • involvement
  • Parents right to know clause
  • -Academic achievement of students
  • -Teacher qualifications

12
Types of Programs
  • Targeted Assistance Programs (TAP) provide
    services to students with the greatest need of
    academic assistance and assistance in meeting
    challenging student academic achievement
    standards. The school is either not eligible for
    school-wide or chooses not to implement one.
  • Schoolwide Programs (SWP) are designed to
    generate high levels of academic achievement in
    core academic areas for all students, and
    especially those who are not demonstrating
    proficiency in meeting the states academic
    content and achievement standards.

13
TAP SWP
  • No poverty threshold
  • Planning for students is incorporated into
    existing school
  • Student identification-ranked and required
  • Utilization of effective methods and
    instructional strategies based on scientifically
    based research
  • Employs strategies to increase parent involvement
  • Instruction by highly qualified teachers
  • Professional development
  • Coordinate and support the regular program
  • Coordinate and integrate federal, state and local
    services and programs
  • Student placement based on multiple criteria (ex.
    Grades, teacher recommendation, CRCT score, grade
    retention)
  • 40 poverty threshold
  • One year structured planning period
  • Student identification not required
  • Utilization of effective, proven, and research
    based practices
  • Employs strategies to increase parent involvement
  • Instruction by highly qualified teachers
  • Professional development
  • Coordinate and support the regular program
  • Coordinate and integrate federal, state and local
    services and programs

14
Targeted Assistance Programs
  • The program should
  • Strengthen the core academic program
  • Provide extended learning time
  • Provide accelerated, high quality curriculum,
    including applied learning
  • Minimize removing children from the regular
    classroom

15
Targeted Assistance Programs
  • Provide assistance to enable children to meet the
    states challenging student academic achievement
    standards by
  • Extending the school year
  • Before and after school and summer programs
  • Training for teachers in how to identify students
    who need additional assistance
  • Training for teachers regarding how to implement
    student academic standards in the classroom

16
Targeted Assistance Programs
  • Targeted Assistance school staff should
  • Be integrated into regular school program and
    overall school planning and improvement efforts
  • Participate in general professional development
    and planning activities
  • Assume limited duties that are assigned to
    similar personnel not paid by Title I
  • Review, on an ongoing basis, the progress of
    participating children
  • Revise the program as needed

17
Schoolwide Programs
  • A schoolwide program is a comprehensive school
    reform model.
  • The model is designed to generate high levels of
    academic achievement in core academic areas for
    all students, especially those who are not
    demonstrating proficiency in meeting the states
    academic content and achievement standards.

18
Schoolwide Programs
  • Schoolwide programs provide
  • Flexibilitycombining resources, serving all
    students, redesigning the school and its services
  • Coordination and integrationreduction in
    curricular and instructional fragmentation
  • Accountabilityclear and coordinated all
    students are responsible for achieving the same
    high standards
  • Unified goalsschoolwide programs bring parents,
    the community, and the school together to
    re-design and improve the school.

19
Schoolwide Programs
  • Implementation components
  • Instruction by highly qualified teachers
  • High quality and ongoing professional development
  • Strategies to attract highly qualified teachers
  • Strategies to increase parental involvement
  • Plans for assisting pre-school children in the
    transition from early childhood programs to local
    elementary schools
  • Inclusion of teachers in decisions about the use
    of academic assessment information or the purpose
    of improving student achievement
  • Effective, timely, and additional assistance for
    students who have difficulty mastering the
    standards at proficient and advanced levels
  • Coordination and integration of federal, state,
    and local services and programs

20
Schoolwide Programs
  • Other requirements of SWPs include
  • Schoolwide programs are not relieved of
    requirements relating to health, safety, civil
    rights student and parental participation and
    involvement services to private school children
    maintenance of effort comparability of services
    and distribution/receipt of funds to state and
    local educational agency.
  • A schoolwide program shall maintain records that
    demonstrate that the program, as a whole,
    addresses the intent and purposes of each of the
    federal programs consolidated to support it.
  • The amount of federal funds used in a schoolwide
    program must be supplemental to the amount of
    state and local funds the school would otherwise
    receive.
  • A schoolwide program that consolidates funds is
    not required to maintain separate fiscal
    accounting records for each of those programs.
  • Monitoring Agencies LEA, state, federal

21
Title I Schools in Bibb County
  • Elementary Schools
  • Barden (SWP)
  • Bernd (SWP)
  • Brookdale (SWP)
  • Bruce-Weir (SWP)
  • Burdell-Hunt (SWP)
  • Burghard (SWP)
  • Burke (SWP)
  • Hamilton (SWP)
  • Hartley (SWP)
  • Elementary Schools
  • Ingram-Pye (SWP)
  • Jones (SWP)
  • King-Danforth (SWP)
  • Lane (TAP)
  • Morgan (SWP)
  • Rice (SWP)
  • Riley (SWP)
  • Skyview (SWP)
  • Union (SWP)
  • Vineville Academy (SWP)
  • Williams (SWP)

22
Title I Schools in Bibb County
  • Middle Schools
  • Appling (SWP)
  • Bloomfield (TAP)
  • McEvoy (SWP)
  • Miller (SWP)
  • Rutland (SWP)
  • Weaver (SWP)
  • High Schools
  • Hutchings Career Center (TAP)
  • Northeast (SWP)
  • Southwest (SWP)

23
Title I Services to Other Education Agencies in
Bibb County
  • Group Homes
  • Georgia Childrens Home
  • Hephzibah Childrens Home
  • Masonic Childrens Home
  • Methodist Home for Children and Youth
  • Private Schools
  • Progressive
  • St. Peter Claver School

24
Adequate Yearly Progress
  • Adequate yearly progress (AYP) is a series of
    performance goals that every school, local
    education agency, and state as a whole must
    achieve within time frames specified in law in
    order to meet the 100 proficiency goal of the No
    Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act.

25
AYP Under NCLB Guidelines
  • January 8, 2002 ESEA of 2001 signed into
    lawbetter known as NCLB.
  • 2002-2003 school year, the state had to submit a
    plan for Adequate Yearly Progress.
  • - Single Statewide Accountability goes into
    effect.

26
Adequate Yearly Progress
  • What happens if a Title I school does not make
    AYP?
  • First year not making AYP----no consequences
  • If a school does not make AYP for two consecutive
    years in the same academic subject, the school is
    identified for school improvement and certain
    sanctions are specified.

27
CRCT Math
  • 2003 50
  • 2005 58.30
  • 2008 66.70
  • 2011 75
  • 2012 83.30
  • 2013 91.7
  • 2014 100

Fieldbook Page 164
28
CRCT Reading / Lang. Arts
  • 2003 60
  • 2005 66.7
  • 2008 73.3
  • 2011 80
  • 2012 86.7
  • 2013 93.3
  • 2014 100

Fieldbook Page 165
29
2004 NEW
Fieldbook Page 167
30
2004 NEW
Fieldbook Page 167
31
Sanctions
  • NI-1
  • Public school choice
  • School improvement plan
  • Technical assistance from the LEA
  • NI-2
  • Public school choice
  • Supplemental educational services
  • Continue technical assistance
  • NI-3
  • Public school choice
  • Supplemental educational services
  • Continue technical assistance
  • Corrective action

32
Sanctions
  • NI-4
  • Public school choice
  • Supplemental educational services
  • Continue technical assistance
  • Continue corrective action
  • Plan for restructuring

33
Sanctions
  • NI-5 or more
  • Public school choice
  • Supplemental educational services
  • Continue technical assistance
  • Continue corrective action
  • Implement restructuring plan

34
School Improvement
  • How does a school get out of needs improvement?
  • When a school makes AYP for two consecutive
    years, it is removed from Needs Improvement
    status.

35
School Improvement
  • Public School Choice
  • Parents have the option to transfer their child
    to another school in the LEA that is not
    identified for improvement
  • LEA pays for transportation
  • Parents notified not later than first day of
    school year
  • All students in the school have the option

36
School Improvement
  • Supplemental Educational Services
  • Provided outside the school day
  • Tutoring services
  • Eligible studentsthose in the school from
    low-income families
  • LEA pays for services from the Title I funds
  • Parents promptly notified

37
Highly Qualified Teachers
  • NCLB places a major emphasis upon teacher quality
    as a factor in improving student achievement.
  • ALL teachers must be highly qualified.
  • Applies to all public k-12 teachers who teach
    core subjects
  • English, reading, or language arts
  • Mathematics
  • Broad field science (such as physics,
  • biology, or chemistry)
  • Broad field social studies (such as
    civics and
  • government, economics, history, or
    geography)
  • Foreign language
  • Arts (visual arts, music, band, and
    chorus)

38
Highly Qualifiedmeans that the teacher is
  • Certified by the PSC
  • plus
  • Content test (PRAXIS II or other state
    certification test
  • or
  • Major/concentration in subject/content area(s)
  • or
  • HOUSSE (veterans only) to establish content
    expertise
  • and
  • Teacher must be assigned to teach appropriate
    subject/content area(s)

39
Highly Qualified Compliance Timeline
  • Core teachers hired and placed in TA or SW Title
    I programs after the first day of school 2002-03
    must be highly qualified upon employment.
  • If hired before the first day of school 2002-03,
    the core teacher must meet the highly qualified
    requirement by the end of the 2005-06 school
    year, both in Title and non-Title programs.
  • Core teacher hired after the first day of school
    2002-03 not working in Title I programs must be
    highly qualified by the end of school year
    2005-06.

40
Title ISupport Staff
  • Valeria Cordy (Program Director) 765-8584
  • Shemika Gary (Secretary) 765-8582
  • Liz Moore ( Budget Manager) 765-8581
  • Title I Coordinators
  • Brenda Carter
    765-8655
  • Deborah White
    765-8580
  • School Improvement Specialist
  • Shelila Culver
    318-5147
  • Tina May
    318-7419

41
Title I School Improvement Specialists
  • The Title I School Improvement Specialists
    provide instructional support to principals and
    teachers in order to maximize student
    opportunities and instructional effectiveness and
    to achieve administrative directives and goals
    established by the Bibb County Board of Education.

42
Shelila Culver
  • School Served
  • Bruce

43
Tina May
  • Schools Served
  • Bernd
  • Hamilton
  • Hartley
  • Jones
  • Morgan
  • Rice
  • Riley
  • Skyview
  • Vineville Academy
  • Williams
  • Bloomfield Middle
  • Miller Middle
  • Weaver Middle
  • Methodist Childrens Home
  • Other Duties
  • Success Maker
  • Parent Involvement / Home-school facilitators

44
Deborah White
  • Other Duties
  • Coordinator of Academic Coach Program (Appling,
    McEvoy, Rutland)
  • Coordinator of Reading First Program
  • Coordinator of School Improvement Plans
  • SES
  • Professional Learning Communities
  • 9th Grade Academy
  • RESA / GADOE Collaboration
  • School Improvement Grant / Distinguished School
    Budgets
  • Schools Served
  • Bruce-Weir
  • Burke
  • Ingram-Pye
  • Union
  • McEvoy
  • Southwest
  • Progressive Christian
  • St. Peter Claver

45
Brenda Carter
  • Schools Served
  • Barden
  • Brookdale
  • Burghard
  • Lane
  • Appling
  • Rutland Middle
  • Hutchings
  • Georgia Childrens Home
  • Masonic Childrens Home
  • Other Duties
  • AYP School Choice Transfers
  • HQT Requirements
  • Literacy Coaches
  • Monthly Title I Update
  • Success Maker
  • Neglected / Delinquent Home Services
  • Title I Monitoring Documents
  • Parent Involvement
  • Collaboration with Homeless Programs
  • Monitor School Budgets
  • Comparability Report

46
Congratulations!2006 Title I Schools of
Distinction
  • Bernd Elementary
  • Brookdale Elementary
  • Burdell-Hunt Elementary
  • Burghard Elementary
  • Burke Elementary
  • Hartley Elementary
  • Jones Elementary
  • Morgan Elementary
  • Rice Elementary
  • Riley Elementary
  • Union Elementary
  • Vineville Academy
  • Williams Elementary

47
Quality Support
  • Highly visible
  • Easily accessible

The measure of our success is student learning.
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