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ESEA: Where We Are and Where We’re Going Michelle Doyle Equitable Services Institute 2014

ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

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ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going. Michelle Doyle Equitable Services Institute 2014. This Congress has not accomplished much Evidence of the gridlock in DC 44 substantive laws enacted this year Compared to average of 70 between 1999 and 2012. Do Nothing Congress. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

ESEA: Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Michelle DoyleEquitable Services Institute 2014

Page 2: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Do Nothing Congress This Congress has not accomplished much

Evidence of the gridlock in DC 44 substantive laws enacted this year◦Compared to average of 70 between

1999 and 2012

Page 3: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

What Has Been Done? Appropriation of funds Passage of ESEA in the House Bills for ESEA reauthorization

introduced in the Senate*********************************************

Extension of Waivers New guidance on the use of federal

funds of technology Guidance on new method of counting

students for Title I

Page 4: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Appropriations—A Look Back The sequester is a group of cuts to federal spending

set to take effect March 1, barring further congressional action.

The sequester was originally passed as part of the Budget Control Act of 2011 (BCA), better known as the debt ceiling compromise.

It was intended to serve as incentive for the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction (aka the “Supercommittee”) to come to a deal to cut $1.5 trillion over 10 years. If the committee had done so, and Congress had passed it by Dec. 23, 2011, then the sequester would have been averted.

Page 5: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Impact of Sequestration

Across-the-board cut of 5.1% for Education Department programs

Cuts in each LEAs differed:◦Increase in poverty = application of

formula yields less than 5.1% cut◦Decrease in poverty = application of

formula yields more than 5.1% cut

Page 6: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Appropriators: Omnibus

Title IA Subgrants to Local Educational Agencies:◦FY 2013 $13,760,219◦FY 2014 $14,384,802◦Percentage change: + 4.539%

This change in appropriations for the 2014-15 school year nearly restores all of the funds that were lost during the 2013-14 school year due to sequestration.

Page 7: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Different Funding Sources Title I

Basic grants◦FY 2013 $6,232,639◦FY 2014 $6,459,401◦Percentage change: + 3.638%

Concentration grants:◦FY 2013 $1,293,919◦FY 2014 $1,362,301◦Percentage change: + 5.285%

Page 8: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Funding Sources (cont.)

Targeted grants:◦FY 2013 $3,116,831◦FY 2014 $3,281,550◦Percentage change: + 5.285%

Education finance grants:◦FY 2013 $3,116,831◦FY 2014 $3,281,550◦Percentage change: + 5.285%

Page 9: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Titles IIA and III Funding

Title IIA◦FY 2013 $2,337,830◦FY 2014 $2,349,830◦Percentage change: + .513%

Title III◦FY 2013 $693,848◦FY 2014 $732,400◦Percentage change: + 4.259%

Page 10: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

ESEA Reauthorization First signed into law January 2002 for 5 years

Renewed each year without change

Several attempts at passage◦Miller proposal◦Kline bill (passed House)◦Harkin bill (passed out of Committtee

twice)◦Alexander bill

Page 11: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Highlights of Kline bill Enhanced consultation language, goal to reach agreement, added pooling and how $$ calculated, “substantially failed” added to bypass and complaint

Calculate private school funding on state level—inform simultaneously; ombudsman

Sign off for all programs Counseling and mentoring firmed up in Title I

Page 12: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Biggest changes Title I funds determined prior to any set asides◦Currently 20% or more set aside for

public school only purposes Title IIA funds determined prior to other uses by LEA◦Currently LEA chooses to spend IIA funds

on class size reduction, teacher recruitment/retention, and professional development

Page 13: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Harkin bill

Passed the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee (HELP)

Did not include any changes to the private school sections

Page 14: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Alexander bill Minority alternative Not considered by the Committee Includes “fix” for Title I

◦Funding for private school program determined prior to any set asides by the LEA

Page 15: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Administration Initiatives

State of the Union: If Congress can’t get it done, Administration will use Executive Orders

Administration has already been making changes◦Waivers◦Technology◦Community Eligibility Option

Page 16: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

President’s Budget Proposal FY15

$14.4 billion for Title I College- and Career-Ready Students;

$11.6 billion for Special Education Grants to States

$723 million for English Learner Education,

$506 million School Turnaround Grants (STG) program

Page 17: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

STEM Education $170 million in new funding for a comprehensive STEM Innovation

proposal to transform teaching and learning in STEM education. $110 million for STEM Innovation Networks to provide competitive

awards to LEAs in partnership with IHEs, nonprofit organizations, other public agencies, and businesses to transform STEM teaching and learning by accelerating the adoption of practices in P-12 education that help increase the number of students who seek out and are effectively prepared for postsecondary education and careers in STEM fields.

$40 million for STEM Teacher Pathways in support of the President’s goal of developing 100,000 new, effective STEM teachers through competitive grants for recruiting, preparing, placing, and supporting talented recent college graduates and mid-career professionals in the STEM fields in high-need schools.

$20 million to support the activities of a National STEM Master Teacher Corps, which would identify, refine, and share models to help America’s best and brightest math and science teachers make the transition from excellent teachers to school and community leaders and advocates for STEM education.

$10 million for a new Non-Cognitive Skills initiative that would provide competitive grants to district and researcher partnerships to develop and test interventions to improve students’ non-cognitive skills in the middle grades.

Page 18: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Waivers Began with 2012-13 school year for two years

45 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the Bureau of Indian Education submitted requests for ESEA flexibility

42 States, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico are approved for ESEA flexibility

Page 19: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Waived Requirements Include…

Adequate Yearly Progress Provision of SES Provision of public school choice transportation

Schools and Districts in Need of Improvement

Page 20: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Requirements Include… Common Core or other acceptable standards

Assessments tied to standards Priority and focus schools Reward schools

Page 21: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Renewal of Waivers 2014-15 This one-year extension will allow

SEAs and ED to gather additional information on successes and challenges in the implementation of reforms committed to under ESEA flexibility, in order to improve current systems and better support students and teachers.

Must amend application to address monitoring findings

Page 22: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Private School Implications of Waivers

Difficult to get transparency

No longer (unless in waiver app) have SES, public school choice, SINI, DINI = less set asides

Add common core Add priority and focus schools = set asides (in some cases)

Page 23: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

ConnectED Initiative High-speed internet to the classroom, Affordable mobile learning devices, High-quality learning content, and Support for teachers to move to digital learning

Within five years.

Page 24: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Updates Needed

Many of the terms we use today to describe technology-enhanced learning did not exist when laws such ESEA and IDEA were passed (2001 and 2004)

ED: Need to clarify opportunities to use federal grant funds to support digital learning

http://www.ed.gov/edblogs/technology/files/2013/06/Federal-Funds-Tech-DC-.pdf

Page 25: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Innovative Use of Federal Funds

Support teachers using digital learning tools (IIA and IA)

Provide online professional development (IIA)

Adopt digital competency-based professional development (IIA and IA)

Digital resources for Common Core (IIA) Digital educational resources for English Language Learners and students with disabilities (III and IDEA)

Page 26: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Additional Ideas Use technology to communicate with parents (IA, III, IDEA)

Connect teachers and STEM professionals with technology (IIA and IIB)

Participate in English Learner focused Communities of Practice (III)

Provide students with mobile learning devices (IA)

Provide assistive technology (IDEA)

Page 27: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Community Eligibility Option Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010 Goal to increase meals served Direct certification

◦ SNAP, TANF, Medicaid, etc. Schools with 40% or more directly certified

students are eligible 1.6 times # of directly certified = new

lunch count Serve free meals to all All states eligible 2014-15

Page 28: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Title I Guidance www2.ed.gov/programs/titleiparta/13-0381guidance.doc

Public and private schools eligible for using CEO◦Unlikely many private schools will use the

option Need 40% directly certified Need to participate in the lunch program Need to provide free lunches to those not

counted for reimbursement

Page 29: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Implications for Private Schools

CEO could lead to higher public school count◦That’s the goal of the program!

Title I funding does not increase due to use of CEO

Proportional share for private school program will be less if public school count is higher

Page 30: ESEA : Where We Are and Where We’re Going

THANK YOU!

Questions? Contact Michelle at [email protected] Michelle Doyle Educational Consulting on FacebookCheck out Michelle’s blog at www.ask-michelle.com