Title: School and LEA Improvement 1116
1School and LEA Improvement 1116
2School Improvement
- States must determine if each school and each
district (even those that do not receive Title I
funds) makes adequate yearly progress as defined
in Section 1111.
3LOCAL ANNUAL REVIEW
- Each Title I LEA must
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Review annually the progress of each
Title I school to determine whether the school is
making AYP, using - Ø    State assessment system and
- Ø    Any local assessments or other academic
indicators, except that these indicators cannot
reduce the number or change the schools that
would otherwise be subject to school improvement. - Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Publish and disseminate results to
parents, teachers, schools and the community. - Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Review the effectiveness of activities
to provide parent involvement, professional
development, and other Title I activities.
4SCHOOL IMPROVEMENTYEAR 1
- Each Title I district must identify for school
improvement any Title I school that fails to make
AYP for two consecutive years. Identification
must take place before the beginning of the
school year following the failure to make AYP. - Within 3 months, an identified school must
develop a school plan, in consultation with
parents, school staff, district, and outside
experts.
5The School Plan must
- Cover a 2-year period
- incorporate strategies based on scientifically
based research to address specific areas that
caused the failure - adopt policies and practices concerning the
schools core academic subjects that have the
greatest likelihood of raising student
achievement to meet the State proficient level
6The School Plan must also
- assure that the school will spend not less than
10 of its Title I funds on professional
development annually - establish annual measurable objectives for
continuous and substantial progress to ensure
that each subgroup will meet proficiency within
12 years - provide effective parent involvement
- incorporate, as appropriate, extended-time
activities - incorporate a teacher-mentoring program.
7SCHOOL IMPROVEMENTYEAR 2
- Â
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Â If a school fails to make AYP by the end
of the first full year after identification, the
district must - Ø    continue to provide technical assistance
- Ø    continue to make public school choice
available - Ø    make supplemental educational services
available.
8Limited Exceptions for all Improvement Actions
- The LEA may delay, for no more than one year
implementation of supplemental services if the
school makes AYP for one year or if failure is
due to exceptional or uncontrollable
circumstances, such as - Ø    Natural disaster
- Ø    Precipitous and unforeseen decline in the
financial resources of the LEA or school.
9Corrective Action
- If a school fails to make AYP by the end of the
second full school year after identification, the
district must - Â
- Ø    continue to make public school choice
available - Ø    continue to make supplemental services
available - Ø    continue technical assistance
- Ø    identify the school for corrective action
and take at least one of the following
actions
10Possible corrective actions.
- replace school staff relevant to the failure
- institute and implement a new curriculum
- significantly decrease management
- authority in the school
- appoint outside experts to advise the school
- extend school year or school day
- restructure internal organization of the school.
11Restructuring
- Â
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Â If a school fails to make AYP after one
full year of corrective action, the district
must - Â
- Ø    continue to make public school choice
available - Ø    continue to make supplemental services
available - Ø    prepare a plan to restructure the school.
12Exiting School Improvement
- If a school identified for improvement,
corrective action, or restructuring makes AYP for
two consecutive years, the school is no longer
subject to improvement.
13TRANSITION FOR PREVIOUSLY IDENTIFIED SCHOOLS
- Schools in the first year of school improvement
in 2001-02 will be in the first year of school
improvement under NCLB in 2002-03 and must
provide public school choice. - Schools with two or more consecutive years of
school improvement in 2001-02 will be in the
second year of school improvement under NCLB in
2002-03 and must provide public school choice and
supplemental educational services. - Schools in corrective action in 2001-02 will be
in corrective action under NCLB in 2002-03 and
must provide public school choice, supplemental
educational services, and take one of the
mandatory corrective actions.
14PUBLIC SCHOOL CHOICE
- For any school identified for school improvement,
corrective action, or restructuring, a district
must provide all students in the school the
option to transfer to another public school not
in school improvement, unless public school
choice is prohibited by State law. - Â
- Districts must give priority to the
lowest-achieving children from low-income
families.
15PUBLIC SCHOOL CHOICE, cont
- A child that transfers may remain in the choice
school until the child has completed the highest
grade in that school. - Â
- If a childs resident school is no longer
identified for improvement, corrective action or
restructuring, the districts obligation to
provide transportation to that child ends at the
end of the school year.
16SUPPLEMENTAL EDUCATIONAL SERVICES - LEA
RESPONSIBILITIES
- For any school in the second year of school
improvement, corrective action or restructuring,
the district must arrange for the provision of
supplemental educational services to eligible
children in that school from a provider with a
demonstrated record of effectiveness that is
selected by the parents from a list of providers
approved by the SEA. - 2. Notify parents annually of
- Ø    The availability of supplemental services
- Ø    The identity of approved providers within
the district - Ø    A brief description of the services,
qualifications and demonstrated effectiveness of
each provider.
17SUPPLEMENTAL EDUCATIONAL SERVICES - LEA
RESPONSIBILITIES
- Â
- 3. Assist parents in choosing a provider.
- 4. Apply fair and equitable procedures for
serving students if the number of spaces at
approved providers is not sufficient to serve all
students. - 5. Enter into an agreement with a provider
selected by a parent. - 6. The district must continue to provide
supplemental services to a child receiving those
services until the end of the school year in
which the services were first received.
18Bottom Line
- States need to identify the list of approved
providers, so that districts can be prepared to
offer supplemental services this fall.
19Definitions of Terms
- Supplemental educational services means tutoring
and other supplemental academic enrichment
services that are - In addition to instruction provided during the
school day and - Of high quality, research-based, and specifically
designed to increase the achievement of eligible
children. - Â
- Eligible child means a child from a low-income
family, as determined by the LEA for purposes of
allocating Title I funds to schools. - Â
- Provider means a non-profit or for-profit entity
or an LEA that - Has a demonstrated record of effectiveness in
increasing student achievement - Is capable of providing supplemental services
that are consistent with the instructional
program of the LEA and the States standards and - Is financially sound.
- Â
20SUPPLEMENTAL EDUCATIONAL SERVICES - SEA
RESPONSIBILITIES
- Promote maximum participation by providers
- Develop and apply objective criteria to potential
providers that are based on a demonstrated record
of effectiveness in increasing student
achievement - Maintain an updated list, by district, of
approved providers
21SUPPLEMENTAL EDUCATIONAL SERVICES - SEA
RESPONSIBILITIES
- Develop, implement, and publicly report on
standards and techniques for monitoring the
quality and effectiveness of the services offered
by approved providers and for withdrawing
approval from providers that fail, for 2
consecutive years, to increase achievement - Provide annual notice to potential providers of
the opportunity to provide supplemental services
and the procedures for obtaining approval.
22SUPPLEMENTAL EDUCATIONAL SERVICES Providers
RESPONSIBILITIES
- Provide parents of children receiving services
with information on their childrens progress - Ensure that instruction and content are
consistent with the district and aligned with
State standards - Meet applicable health, safety, and civil rights
laws - Provide instruction that is secular, neutral and
non-ideological.
23 FOR TRANSPORTATION ANDSUPPLEMENTAL SERVICES
- Unless a smaller amount is needed, a district
must spend, to provide transportation for choice
and supplemental educational services, an amount
equal to - 5 of the districts Title I allocation for
transportation - 5 of the districts Title I allocation for
supplemental services, and - an additional 10 of the districts Title I
allocation for either transportation or
supplemental services.
24SEA Responsibilities
- Make technical assistance available, such as
through school support teams, to schools
identified for school improvement, corrective
action and restructuring - Take corrective action as the SEA determines
appropriate if a district fails to carry out its
responsibilities - Ensure assessment results are provided to a
district before the beginning of the next school
year and before identification of schools may
take place
25SEA Responsibilities, continued
- Notify the Secretary of major factors that
significantly affected student achievement in
districts and schools identified for improvement - Identify districts for improvement and corrective
action
26LEA Improvement
- District improvement is based on the same AYP
definitions in a state. Including, participation
of at least 95 of students enrolled in the
grades tested in the accountability system.