Title: Making Sound Use of Funds Decisions
1Making Sound Use of Funds Decisions for Title I,
Part D Nicholas Read and Simon Gonsoulin,
NDTACJeff Breshears, California Department of
Education
2Objectives
- Participants will
- Explore a detailed decision making process for
deciding the allowableness and appropriateness of
fund use proposals. - Consider ways to act as a technical assistance
(TA) provider to subgrantees in their use of
funds. - Discuss prioritizing funding based on program
needs and outcomesduring times of funding excess
and scarcity. - Examine ways of using Part D funds
collaboratively with other Federal, State, and
local funds.
3Times for Making Use of Funds Decisions
- During application review
- Consider adding guidance/requirements within the
application itself - Lay out expectations, priorities, and dos and
donts. - Be prescriptive up front for easier review and
decision making later. - Ongoing, after funds are allocated
- Decisions may depend on current circumstances,
outcomes to date, and other factors.
4Making Sound Use of Fund Decisions
- Deciding allowable and appropriate
- Use clearly defined decision making processes or
rules. - Start with the musts and work through to the
shoulds, using - Federal requirements and priorities
- Part D statute and nonregulatory guidance as well
as other Federal regulations - State Plan goals and objectives
- Subgrantee application requirements and expressed
needs - State and local laws, regulations, and guidelines
- Elements that facilitate program planning and
improvement - Always keep outcomes and needs in mind!
5Using Data for Increased Assurance
- To feel more confident in deciding
appropriateness - Facility, program, and student data hold valuable
information on - Outcomes teacher retention, facility
environment, academic progress, credits/degrees
earned, successful transitions - Needs professional development, technology,
increased literacy, family/community involvement - Outcome- and needs-based decisions will hold more
weight with USED. - Such decisions demonstrate to stakeholders that
funds are being allocated effectively and
efficiently.
6The Role of the SEA, SA, and LEA Coordinators
- The SEA is not just a pass through for funds
- Coordinators have funding discretion, they
- Should feel comfortable with the decisions and
confident in the decision making process - May want to consider the possibility of creating
State regulations/guidance - TA at all levels leads to better uses of funds
and implementation of programs - SAs and LEAs should not act as pass throughs
either. - The relationship between funder and funded should
exist at all levels.
7Creative Uses Times of Feast
- Example American Recovery and Reinvestment Act
(ARRA) - Filling immediate needs vs. sustainable
programming - What to consider
- Begin a new pilot program and evaluate impact.
- Expand pilot programs to statewide programming.
- Conduct external evaluation of existing programs.
- Use evaluation data and expand effective/promising
programming. - Increase partnerships that will improve
collaboration. - Increase face-to-face staff development
activities. - Further improve continuous quality improvement
efforts. - Sponsor activities that promote the engagement of
parents and the community. - Braid or blend funding.
8Creative Uses Times of Famine
- Example Current economic downturn
- Doing more with less leads to increased
emphasis on meeting needs and addressing
outcomes. - What to consider
- Contract with a proven grant writer to secure
grant dollars. - Partner with foundations and other private
funders. - Employ existing technology for staff development.
- Maintain regional pilot programs and collect
longitudinal evaluation data. - Cut programs with poor outcomes and expand
programs that suggest or have shown a cost
benefit. - Fund evidence-based programs or those
professionals feel are effective. - Maintain effective programs that reach the
majority of the youth you must serve. - Braid or blend funding (e.g., run Institutionwide
projects).
9Collaborative Funding
- Blended funding
- Example Institution-wide Projects
- Braided funding
- Example Read 180 Lab
10Activity You Be the Judge
- Read the real-life use of funds proposals.
- Using your own decision rules and any additional
information/data available, decide allowableness
and appropriateness. - Describe your decision to the group, explaining
how and why you decided what you did. - Also explain whether there are any proactive
steps you could have taken to make this decision
even easier for you to make.