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June 11, 2010
Development Panel Monitor Orientation
Investing in Innovation (i3) Orientation
Note: These slides are intended for internal use only and as guidance to help you complete the Validation peer review process.
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What is the role of a PANEL MONITOR?
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• Contact reviewers to schedule panel calls• Assist reviewers with any questions• Identify any conflicts of interest• Facilitate panel calls for all 20 applications on each panel
• Make sure reviewers enter comments/scores in e-Reader promptly
• Promptly send feedback on written comments/scores to reviewers and notify reviewers when scores are to be SUBMITTED in final form
Panel Monitor
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Investing in Innovation (i3) Fund Summary
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Purpose
Funding
Applicants
To provide competitive grants to applicants with a record of improving student achievement and attainment in order to expand the implementation of, and investment in, innovative practices that are demonstrated to have an impact on:•Improving student achievement or student growth, closing achievement gaps, decreasing dropout rates, increasing high school graduation rates, or increasing college enrollment and completion rates
$650 million to be obligated by September 30, 2010
Eligible applicants are: (1)Local educational agencies (LEAs) (2)Nonprofit organizations in partnership with (a) one or more LEAs or (b) a consortium of schools
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Types of Awards Available Under i3
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i3
EstimatedFunding Available
Up to $5MM/award Up to $30MM/award Up to $50MM/award
Evidence Required
Reasonable – research findings or hypotheses, including related research or theories in education and other sectors
Moderate – either high internal validity and medium external validity, or vice versa
Strong – both high internal validity and high external validity
Scaling Required
Able to further develop and scale
Able to be scaled to the regional or state level
Able to be scaled to the national, regional, or state level
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MUST
MUST
Eligible Applicant:
LEA
Eligible Applicant:
LEA
•Demonstrate that it: (a) significantly closed achievement gaps between groups of students or demonstrated success in significantly increasing academic achievement for all groups of students, and(b) made significant improvement in other areas
Establish partnerships with private sectorSecure commitment for required 20% private sector matchMeet the evidence requirement for the type of grant for which it has applied
•Demonstrate that it: (a) significantly closed achievement gaps between groups of students or demonstrated success in significantly increasing academic achievement for all groups of students, and(b) made significant improvement in other areas
Establish partnerships with private sectorSecure commitment for required 20% private sector matchMeet the evidence requirement for the type of grant for which it has applied
TO RECEIVE A GRANT,MUST
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MUST
MUST
Eligible Applicant:
Non-profits, in partnership with LEA(s) or a consortium of schools
Eligible Applicant:
Non-profits, in partnership with LEA(s) or a consortium of schools
Demonstrate that the non-profit organization has a record of significantly improving student achievement, attainment, or retention through its record of work with an LEA or schools
Secure commitment for required 20% private sector matchMeet the evidence requirement for the type of grant for which they have applied
Demonstrate that the non-profit organization has a record of significantly improving student achievement, attainment, or retention through its record of work with an LEA or schools
Secure commitment for required 20% private sector matchMeet the evidence requirement for the type of grant for which they have applied
TO RECEIVE A GRANT,MUST
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All Eligible Applicants Must Implement Practices, Strategies, or Programs for
High-Need Students
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MUST
MUST
High-need student means a student at risk of educational failure, or otherwise in need of special assistance and support, such as students who are living in poverty, who attend high-minority schools, who are far below grade level, who are over-age and under-credited, who have left school before receiving a regular high school diploma, who are at risk of not graduating with a regular high school diploma on time, who are homeless, who are in foster care, who have been incarcerated, who have disabilities, or who are limited English proficient.
High-need student means a student at risk of educational failure, or otherwise in need of special assistance and support, such as students who are living in poverty, who attend high-minority schools, who are far below grade level, who are over-age and under-credited, who have left school before receiving a regular high school diploma, who are at risk of not graduating with a regular high school diploma on time, who are homeless, who are in foster care, who have been incarcerated, who have disabilities, or who are limited English proficient.
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1. Teacher and Principal Effectiveness
2. Improved Use of Data Systems
3. College- and Career-ready Standards and
High Quality Assessments
4. Improving Achievement in Persistently Low-performing
Schools
5. Early Learning(0 or 1 point)
6. College Access and Success
(0 or 1 point)
7. Serving Students with Disabilities and Limited
English Proficient Students(0 or 1 point)
8. Serving Students in Rural LEAs
(0, 1, or 2 points)
i3 Priorities
Must select one(Absolute Priority)
May select one or more(Competitive Preference
Priorities)
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Notes on Absolute Priority 1Innovations that Support Effective Teachers and Principals
• “…increase the number or percentages of teachers or principals who are highly effective teachers or principals or reduce the number or percentages of teachers or principals who are ineffective, especially for teachers of high-need students…”
• “…by identifying, recruiting, developing, placing, rewarding, and retaining highly effective teachers or principals (or removing ineffective teachers or principals).”
• “…teacher or principal effectiveness should be determined through an evaluation system that is rigorous, transparent, and fair; performance should be differentiated using multiple rating categories of effectiveness; multiple measures of effectiveness should be taken into account, with data on student growth as a significant factor, and the measures should be designed and developed with teacher and principal involvement.”
Two Possible Routes
Multiple Measures of Effectiveness
Multiple Methods
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Notes on Absolute Priority 2 Innovations that Improve the Use of Data
• “…(a) encourage and facilitate the evaluation, analysis, and use of student achievement or student growth data by educators, families, and other stakeholders in order to inform decision-making and improve student achievement, student growth, or teacher, principal, school, or LEA performance and productivity; or (b) enable data aggregation, analysis, and research”
• “…data must be disaggregated using the student subgroups described in section 1111(b)(3)(C)(xiii) of the ESEA…”
Two Possible Areas of Focus
Data Disaggregation
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Notes on Absolute Priority 3 Innovations that Complement the Implementation of High
Standards and High-Quality Assessments• “…standards and assessments that measure students’
progress toward college and career-readiness…”
• “…may include, but are not limited to, … • increase the success of underrepresented student
populations in academically rigorous courses and programs…;
• increase the development and use of formative assessments or interim assessments, or other performance-based tools and “metrics” that are aligned with high student content and academic achievement standards; or
• translate the standards and information from assessments into classroom practices that meet the needs of all students, including high-need students.
• “…eligible applicant must propose a project that is based on standards that are at least as rigorous as its State’s standards…”
Focus on College & Career Readiness
Range of Allowable Projects
RigorousStandards
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Notes on Absolute Priority 4 Innovations that Turn Around
Persistently Low-Performing Schools
• “Whole-school reform, including, but not limited to, comprehensive interventions to assist, augment, or replace Investing in Innovation Fund Absolute Priority 4 schools, including the school turnaround, restart, closure, and transformation models of intervention … OR …”
• “Targeted approaches to reform, including, but not limited to:
• Providing more time for students to learn core academic content by expanding or augmenting the school day, school week, or school year, or by increasing instructional time for core academic subjects
• integrating ‘‘student supports’’ into the school model to address non-academic barriers to student achievement
• creating multiple pathways for students to earn regular high school diplomas”
Projects May Choose Either
Approach
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i3 Priority 4 Schools
Under Absolute Priority 4, the Department provides funding to support strategies, practices, or programs that are designed to turn around schools that are in any of the following categories:
(a)persistently lowest-achieving schools (as defined in the final requirements for the School Improvement Grants program, see http://www2.ed.gov/programs/sif/faq.html);
(b)Title I schools that are in corrective action or restructuring under section 1116 of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA); or
(c)secondary schools (both middle and high schools) eligible for but not receiving Title I funds that, if receiving Title I funds, would be in corrective action or restructuring under section 1116 of the ESEA.
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i3 Absolute Priorities
Applicants must address ONE Absolute Priority
No perks for addressing more than one Absolute Priority
Absolute Priority is not scored
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Notes on Competitive Preference Priority 5 Innovations for Improving Early Learning Outcomes
• “…improve educational outcomes for high-need students who are young children (birth through 3rd grade) by enhancing the quality of early learning programs”
• “…(a) improving young children’s school readiness (including social, emotional, and cognitive readiness) so that children are prepared for success in core academic subjects (as defined in section 9101(11) of the ESEA); (b) improving developmental milestones and standards and aligning them with appropriate outcome measures; and (c) improving alignment, collaboration, and transitions between early learning programs that serve children from birth to age three, in preschools, and in kindergarten through third grade.”
Focus on High-need Children
Projects Must Address All 3
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Notes on Competitive Preference Priority 6 Innovations that Support College Access and Success
• “… enable kindergarten through grade 12 (K–12) students, particularly high school students, to successfully prepare for, enter, and graduate from a two- or four-year college…”
• “…(a) address students’ preparedness and expectations related to college; (b) help students understand issues of college affordability and the financial aid and college application processes; and (c) provide support to students from peers and knowledgeable adults.”
Focus on College
Graduation
Projects Must Address All 3
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Notes on Competitive Preference Priority 7 Innovations to Address the Unique Learning Needs of Students
with Disabilities and Limited English Proficient Students
• “…address the unique learning needs of students with disabilities, including those who are assessed based on alternate academic achievement standards, or the linguistic and academic needs of limited English proficient students.”
• “…must provide for the implementation of
particular practices, strategies, or programs that are designed to improve academic outcomes, close achievement gaps, and increase college- and career-readiness, including increasing high school graduation rates (as defined in this notice), for students with disabilities or limited English proficient students.”
Focus on Either Student
Population
Projects That Improve Specific
Outcomes
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Notes on Competitive Preference Priority 8 Innovations that Serve Schools in Rural LEAs
• “…focus on the unique challenges of high-need students in schools within a rural LEA…”
• “…must include practices, strategies, or programs that are designed to improve student achievement or student growth, close achievement gaps, decrease dropout rates, increase high school graduation rates, or improve teacher and principal effectiveness in one or more rural LEAs.”
Focus on Specific Locations
Projects May Address Range of Outcomes
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Scoring the Competitive Preference Priorities (CPP)
Applicants may address ONE or MORE CPPsCPP 5, 6, and 7 are scored as all or nothing (1
or 0)CPP 8 is scored with 0,1, or 2A CPP may have a score of 0 or 1 and still
have strength and weakness commentsOnly the subject matter reviewers will
score the CPPs.
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i3 Selection Criteria and Points
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* Development grants will be judged in two tiers: all eligible applications will be scored on Criteria A, C, E, F, and G and the competitive preference priorities; then high-scoring applications will be scored on Criteria B and D by a different panel of reviewers.
Selection Criteria Development Validation Scale-UpA. Need for the Project and
Quality of the Project Design 25 20 15
B. Strength of Research, Significance of Effect and Magnitude of Effect
10* 15 20
C. Experience of the Eligible Applicant
25 20 15
D. Quality of the Project Evaluation
15* 15 15
E. Strategy and Capacity to Bring to Scale or to Further Develop and Bring to Scale
5 10 15
F. Sustainability 10 10 10G. Quality of the Management
Plan and Personnel 10 10 10
Total Points 100 100 100
Subject Matter Reviewers will Score Criteria A, C, E, F, and G (NOT the Evidence and Evaluation Criteria)
Subject Matter Review
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Development GrantsA. Need for the Project and Quality of the Project
Design (up to 25 points)
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The Secretary considers the need for the project and quality of the design of the proposed project. In determining the need for the project and quality of the design of the proposed project, the Secretary considers the following factors:
1)The extent to which the proposed project represents an exceptional approach to the priorities the eligible applicant is seeking to meet (i.e., addresses a largely unmet need, particularly for high-need students, and is a practice, strategy, or program that has not already been widely adopted).2)The extent to which the proposed project has a clear set of goals and an explicit strategy, with the goals, objectives, and outcomes to be achieved by the proposed project clearly specified and measurable and linked to the priorities the eligible applicant is seeking to meet.
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Development GrantsC. Experience of the Eligible Applicant (up to 25
points)
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The Secretary considers the experience of the eligible applicant in implementing the proposed project. In determining the experience of the eligible applicant, the Secretary considers the following factors:
•The past performance of the eligible applicant in implementing projects of the size and scope proposed by the eligible applicant.
•The extent to which an eligible applicant provides information and data demonstrating that—
(a) In the case of an eligible applicant that is an LEA, the LEA has— (i) Significantly closed the achievement gaps between groups of students described in section 1111(b)(2) of the ESEA, or significantly increased student achievement for all groups of students described in such section; and (ii) Made significant improvements in other areas, such as graduation rates or increased recruitment and placement of high-quality teachers and principals, as demonstrated with meaningful data; or
(b) In the case of an eligible applicant that includes a nonprofit organization, the nonprofit organization has significantly improved student achievement, attainment, or retention through its record of work with an LEA or schools.
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Development GrantsE. Strategy and Capacity to Further Develop and Bring to Scale (up to
5 points)
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The Secretary considers the quality of the eligible applicant’s strategy and capacity to further develop and bring to scale the proposed project. In determining the quality of the strategy and capacity to further develop and bring to scale the proposed project, the Secretary considers:
•The number of students proposed to be reached by the proposed project and the capacity of the eligible applicant and any other partners to reach the proposed number of students during the course of the grant period.
2)The eligible applicant’s capacity (e.g., in terms of qualified personnel, financial resources, or management capacity) to further develop and bring to scale the proposed practice, strategy, or program, or to work with others (including other partners) to ensure that the proposed practice, strategy, or program can be further developed and brought to scale, based on the findings of the proposed project.
•The feasibility of the proposed project to be replicated successfully, if positive results are obtained, in a variety of settings and with a variety of student populations. Evidence of this ability includes the availability of resources and expertise required for implementing the project with fidelity, and the proposed project’s evidence of relative ease of use or user satisfaction.•The eligible applicant’s estimate of the cost of the proposed project, which includes the start-up and operating costs per student per year (including indirect costs) for reaching the total number of students proposed to be served by the project. The eligible applicant must include an estimate of the costs for the eligible applicant or others (including other partners) to reach 100,000, 250,000, and 500,000 students.•The mechanisms the eligible applicant will use to broadly disseminate information on its project so as to support further development or replication.
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Development Grants F. Sustainability (up to 10 points)
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The Secretary considers the adequacy of resources to continue the proposed project after the grant period ends. In determining the adequacy of resources for the proposed project, the Secretary considers the following factors:
•The extent to which the eligible applicant demonstrates that it has the resources, as well as the support of stakeholders (e.g., State educational agencies, teachers' unions), to operate the project beyond the Development grant.•The potential and planning for the incorporation of project purposes, activities, or benefits into the ongoing work of the eligible applicant and any other partners at the end of the Development grant.
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Development Grants G. Quality of the Management Plan and Personnel
(up to 10 points)
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The Secretary considers the quality of the management plan and personnel for the proposed project. In determining the quality of the management plan and personnel for the proposed project, the Secretary considers:
•The adequacy of the management plan to achieve the objectives of the proposed project on time and within budget, including clearly defined responsibilities, timelines, and milestones for accomplishing project tasks.
•The qualifications, including relevant training and experience, of the project director and key project personnel, especially in managing projects of the size and scope of the proposed project.
DEVELOPMENT REVIEW
Review Process & Reviewer Expectations
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What is the basic i3 review process?
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For all three grant types…
• The Department will use independent peer reviewers from various backgrounds and professions who have been thoroughly screened for conflicts of interest
• Applications will be assigned to panels by absolute priority where possible
• Evidence and evaluation experts will score the selection criteria (B and D) focused on evidence and evaluation in the Tier 2 review
• Peer reviewers will determine whether any competitive preference priority points should be added
Development Only…
• Development applications will be reviewed in a two tier process– In Tier 1, all eligible applicants will be reviewed and scored
against Selection Criteria A, C, E, F and G by three peer reviewers. Competitive Preference Points will also be added as appropriate by peer reviewers.
– Only those highest rated in Tier 1 will advance to Tier 2, where Selection Criteria B and D will be scored by two peer reviewers who are evidence and evaluation experts.
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What is expected of a Peer Reviewer?
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Process
Behavior
• Review the entire i3 application package and FAQs
• Review and become thoroughly familiar with the selection criteria, factors, and notes
• Familiarize yourself with the e-Reader system – used for inputting scores and comments
• Participate in all scheduled conference calls
• Provide appropriate comments that justify the score awarded and are helpful to the applicant
• Revise comments as suggested by your panel monitor
• Return all forms as required to ensure payment and completion of review process
• Be available the entire review process
• Draw upon your expertise
• Maintain confidentiality throughout the review process
Preparation
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What must a Peer Reviewer really do? Receive applications and panel assignments from Synergy Identify any Conflicts of Interest, and notify Synergy or
panel monitor immediately Participate in Orientation webinar Register in and become acquainted with e-Reader Read applications (It may be helpful to you to take notes!) Write draft comments, assign scores, and submit drafts in e-
Reader before panel discussion (We recommend cutting and pasting from Word)
Receive feedback on comments from Panel Monitor Revise draft comments based on feedback as appropriate When comments/scores are acceptable to Panel Monitor,
submit final comments/scores Sign and return Technical Review Signature Forms to Synergy Remember to submit All Necessary Forms to Synergy35
Prior to Panel Discussion
After Panel Discussion
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Registering in e-Reader http://e-grants.ed.govCall the e-Grants help desk at 1-888-336-3930 to request a
PIN# for the registration processClick the “Continue” button and the “Register” button Indicate that you are an ED Employee and select the e-
Reader moduleComplete the User Registration page and SubmitA system generated password will be e-mailed to youUse the username and password to loginExisting e-Reader users should use their existing username
and password.
Help Desk Hours of Operation
Tuesday, Friday and Saturday: Available 24 hoursMonday and Thursday: 6am – midnight; Sunday: midnight – 8pm and Wednesday: midnight – 7pm
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Panel Call 101Panel calls are held at 8:30 AM, 11:30 AM, and 2:30
PM dailyReviewers/Panel Monitors have selected their
preferred time slotPanel calls are held by phone and each panel has its
own conference call number4-6 Applications should be covered on each panel call
until all 20 applications are completedPanel calls will likely last the entire 2 ½ hour period June 14-18, all panel calls should be completeReview follow up should be completed by June 25,
2010Adjustments to panel call times may be arranged
between the reviewers and panel monitorBe FLEXIBLE and expect EMERGENCIES
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Conducting a Panel CallContact reviewers no later June 11 to schedule panel calls Use the first call to go over the review process, introductions,
and answer initial questionsGo over the selection criteria and CPPs for each applicationHave reviewers discuss strengths and weaknesses for each
criterion and CPPs, if applicableUse prompt questions & reviewers’ scores to generate panel
discussionsUse the score comparison sheet to keep track of reviewers’
scores and scoring changesMake sure scores received are justified by the written
comments If needed, conduct a second panel call to further discuss
applications that have a 20 percent varianceComments should be continuously reviewed until you give
reviewers final approval to SUBMIT comments in e-Reader43
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Reviewing Application Scores Numeric scores indicate how well the applicant responded to the
selection criteria Use the entire range of points for each criterion. There is NO scoring rubric, so all factors should be evaluated equally For each of the competitive preference priorities, applicants do not earn a
point simply for addressing the priority. Reviewers must award points based on how well applicants address the requirements of the priority.
Make sure that your comments are consistent with your numeric scores If full points are awarded to a criterion, all comments should be in
“strengths” section and “no weaknesses found” should be entered in the “weaknesses” section.
If partial points are awarded to a criterion, there should be points and comments under both the “strengths” and “weaknesses” sections.
ZERO means that something is missing from a criterion and all reviewers MUST agree in order to award ZERO points to a criterion
For CPPs, ZERO means that the applicant did not provide a quality response to the priority. All reviewers DO NOT have to agree to award ZERO points on a CPP37
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Reviewing Application Comments
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“Do’s” “Don’ts”
Application should be read and scored against the selection criteria
Comments should support the numeric score and should be based on the strengths and weaknesses of an application’s responses to the selection criteria.
Comments should be clear, concise, and objective.
Comments should be written in complete sentences
Remind reviewers to use the spelling and grammar check on all comments before they submit
Remind reviewers to include application page numbers as they are helpful in the comments
• Don’t compare applications. The should be evaluated independently
• Don’t Summarize, paraphrase or quote information presented in the application without adding comments that explain your judgment about that information
• Don’t Write one- or two-word comments to justify your scores
• Don’t Use inflammatory or derogatory language when writing comments
• Don’t ask questions of the applicant in comments
• Don’t copy and paste comments from applications and use them in other applications
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Reviewing Application Comments (cont’d)Provide feedback/edits to reviewers on their
comments promptly (next slide)
Have reviewers keep you posted on the status of their comments
Develop a system to track what you have reviewed, need to review, need from reviewers, and what TRFs are complete
Keep in mind that applicants will be receiving the reviewer comments, so review them thoroughly
Keep in mind that comments may be made public, so review them thoroughly
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How to Provide Feedback to Reviewers
Copy and paste reviewers comments from e-Reader into a Word doc, then use Track Changes to edit comments. Email this document to the reviewer
Use Outlook or e-Reader to email edits/feedback to reviewers. You could list edits for each application by criterion
Either way is fine, use what works best for you
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Sample Comment – #1
“The application proposes to create a professional development program for teachers that will instruct them how to use performance data from class assignments and to use it to improve their teaching. It’s an excellent idea.”
Problems: The comment simply paraphrases the application, and it does not explain why the reviewer likes the idea.
Revision: “One of the strengths of the proposed professional development program is that it gives teachers direct practice in using the newly created online repository of student assignments that can be used “in the moment” when classroom assessments identify a learning deficiency. As the application demonstrates on p. 17, this technology-based approach aligns with research showing that learning deficits can be remedied if addressed immediately.”
Why is it Better?: It explains more clearly why the reviewer believes this is a quality program, and it includes specific references to the proposal.
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Sample Comments – #2“This management plan seems thorough and thoughtful, with appropriate LEA representation on the advisory council. The allocation of leadership and responsibilities seems appropriate to the tasks, and the schedule laid out in the chart seems reasonable.”
Problems: At first glance, these comments seem fine, but they are not as helpful as they could be. More detail is necessary to explain what about the management plan is “thorough and thoughtful.” What characteristics of the schedule or the allocation of responsibilities is the reviewer referencing?
Partial Revision: “…It makes sense in this case to split administrative leadership of the project from the coordination of the each of the school-based implementation sites and to assign these duties to different individuals…”
Why is it Better?: The revision makes more clear what specific aspects of the leadership plan are “appropriate” and “reasonable.”41
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Sample Comments – #3
(Weakness) “The administrative employee is on contract and is not a full-time employee. Is that advisable?”
Problem: It may appear that points have been deducted based on an issue of uncertainty, and the applicant cannot respond. It’s generally best to avoid questions. No weakness has been specifically identified.
Revision: Because the administrative employee is contracted, rather than serving as a full-time employee, it is unclear whether the applicant would be able to absorb this individual’s critical functions after the grant period is over.
Why is it Better?: The revision refrains from asking a question and more clearly explains why there might be a weakness in the way this employee has been budgeted.
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Accessing the Technical Review Form (TRF)
Log into e-Reader, select “Reports”, select “84.396C (2010)”
Score Comparison gives you overall scores; selecting the application gives you a breakdown of scores
Reviews brings you to the TRF for each reviewer for each application
Select a TRF for a reviewer, then select Print/View Form to view or print the TRF
42
Disable “Smart Quotes” in MS Word
Peer Reviewers are encouraged to write their comments is MS Word, then copy and past them into e-Reader. Before you start typing in MS Word , you should disable Smart Quotes to avoid formatting problems in e-Reader. The instructions are below:
o In MS Word on the Tools menu, click AutoCorrect. o Go to the AutoFormat As you Type tab. o Uncheck the option “Straight quotes” with “smart quotes.” o Uncheck the option Symbol characters (- -) with symbols (--).o Go to the AutoFormat tab. o Uncheck the option “Straight quotes” with “smart quotes.” o Uncheck the option Symbol characters (- -) with symbols (--). o Click the OK button.
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Other Important Resources
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Investing in Innovation Fund Website: (http://www.ed.gov/programs/innovation/index.html)
Notice of Final Priorities, Requirements, Definitions, and Selection Criteria
Application Package (includes the Notice Inviting Applications)
Frequently Asked Questions Evidence Summary Table Selection Criteria Summary Table
i3 Overview (PowerPoint) i3 At-A-Glance (Quick Reference) Archived recordings of the i3 Webinars i3 Glossary
Orientation Slides Panel Monitor Orientation Handouts
44
Questions
Please direct all questions to:Thelma Leenhouts
(i3 Competition Manager)
[email protected](202) 260-0223
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Compensation for a job well done!!
We will offer Comp time or Overtime. Each person must select only one
You may receive up to 40 hours of comp time or overtime over the two week review period
Comp time expires after 26 pays (one year)Overtime is time and a ½ if you are a grade 7 or 9Grades 11 and higher will only receive you regular
hourly pay http://www.opm.gov/oca/10tables/html/dcb_h.asp
Part time employees may receive only comp time or they may work up to 40 hours
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The i3 Core Team would like to thank you for all your support in helping us to complete this i3
grant competition.
THANK YOU