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Serving New Title I Schools April 15, 2009

Serving New Title I Schools April 15, 2009. Julie McCargar Executive Director, Office of Federal Programs. Marjorie Douglas NCLB Regional Coordinator, West TN. Debbie Owens Associate Executive Director, Office of Federal Programs. Rita Fentress

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Serving New Title I Schools April 15, 2009

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  1. Serving New Title I Schools April 15, 2009

  2. Julie McCargar Executive Director, Office of Federal Programs Marjorie Douglas NCLB Regional Coordinator, West TN Debbie Owens Associate Executive Director, Office of Federal Programs Rita Fentress Public School Choice/Supplemental Education Services Project Director

  3. Agenda • Overview of Title I • Transitioning from a non-Title I school to a Title I school • Questions • Fiscal Aspects of Title I Schools • Questions • High Priority Title I Schools • Questions

  4. Audience • Local Title I Directors • Principals of Schools New to Title I • Exemplary Educators We will archive this so you can share with your colleagues.

  5. Title I ARRA Funds Remember to use these funds that you can defend to the public as they will be publicly reported and studied. Funds must be budgeted based on a school’s needs as a consequence of its TSIP needs assessment.

  6. Overview of Title I Dr. Julie McCargar Executive Director Office of Federal Programs

  7. History of Title I • Elementary and Secondary Education Act – 1965 • Part of President Johnson’s War on Poverty • School-based program • Started as a supplemental program that “targeted” certain students who were falling behind academically

  8. Two Program Designs for Title I Schools Targeted Assistance Program Schoolwide School

  9. Requirements for Both Schools • Parent Involvement Policy and Parent/School Compacts • Parent Notification Requirements • School Status • Non-Highly Qualified Teachers • Annual Parent Meeting • Share school’s progress • Share school’s Title I plan (TSIP)

  10. Personnel • All core subject teachers must be highly qualified in all schools • Only paraprofessionals in Title I schools or programs need to be highly qualified • Parent notification required in Title I schools after 4 consecutive weeks when a child has been taught by a non-HQ teacher

  11. Highly Qualified Paraprofessionals • Paraprofessionals must be highly qualified if they provide instructional services (qualifications at http://www.tennessee.gov/education/fedprog/fpguidance.shtml ) • Paraprofessionals must work with a highly qualified teacher • May need to transfer staff to other schools if paraprofessionals aren’t HQ

  12. Transitioning FromNON-TITLE I Schools to TITLE ISchools Marjorie Douglas

  13. Two types of Title I Programs • Schoolwide • Targeted Assistance

  14. Eligibility for a Schoolwide program Minimum of 40% of the students must be from low-income families

  15. Poverty Calculation • Free and Reduced Lunch Count • Feeder pattern concept may be used for middle schools and high schools- This concept allows the LEA to use the poverty rate of feeder schools to determine whether a school meets the 40% poverty threshold to operate a schoolwide program.

  16. Essential differences between schoolwide (SW) and targeted assistance (TA) programs?

  17. Schoolwide • A schoolwide school uses all available resources (State, local, and federal) to upgrade the entire educational program; its primary goal is to ensure that all students, particularly those who are low-achieving, demonstrate proficient and advanced levels of achievement on State academic achievement standards.

  18. Schoolwide Cont. • In a schoolwide school individual students are not identified as Title I participants. • No distinctions are made between staff paid with Title I funds and staff paid from other funding sources.

  19. Schoolwide Staff • In a schoolwide school all school staff are expected to direct their efforts toward upgrading the entire educational program and improving the achievement of all students, particularly those who are low achieving.

  20. Targeted Assistance • A targeted assistance program employs staff paid with Title I funds to serve onlythose students who have been identified as being most at-risk of not meeting the State’s challenging standards. • Multiple measures of student academic achievement are used to determine which students are eligible to participate in the program.

  21. Targeted Assistance Cont • In a targeted assistance program services to eligible students may be provided through one or more of the following compliance models: in class, add-on, pullout, or replacement.

  22. Research Findings • Schoolwide or targeted assistance? Effective schools research points to the value of implementing comprehensive improvement strategies throughout an entire school as a way of improving outcomes for individual students.

  23. All Students Can Learn • Research findings reinforce the fact that all students, including the lowest performing students, in high-poverty schools can master challenging academic content and complex problem solving skills when resources, practices, and procedures are coordinated across an entire school.

  24. School Improvement Plan Components • All Title I schools (schoolwide and targeted assistance) must have a current school improvement plan which includes required components. • The existing School Improvement Planning team may be utilized to review/ update the School Improvement Plan (SIP) and add Title I required components not currently found in the SIP.

  25. 10 Schoolwide Components • A comprehensive needs assessment of the entire school using data analysis of NCLB subgroups. • Schoolwide reform strategies with emphasis on improved achievement of the lowest achieving students; • Instruction by highly qualified staff as addressed in NCLB; • Highly quality and ongoing professional development activities; • Strategies to attract highly qualified teachers to high needs schools; • Strategies to increase effective parental involvement;

  26. 10 SIP SW Components, Cont • Plans for assisting preschool children from early childhood programs to elementary school programs; • Measures to include teachers in assessment decisions regarding the use of assessment in improving student performance and instructional programs; 9. Strategies for providing timely additional assistance to students experiencing difficulties mastering standards; and 10.Coordination and integration of federal, state, and local services and programs.

  27. Legal Requirements Reference • See requirements in Comprehensive Monitoring Document • http://www.state.tn.us/education/fedprog/fpmonitoring.shtml

  28. Must every school spend an entire year planning before implementing a schoolwide program? • An exception to this general rule may be made if the LEA determines In consultation with your NCLB Consultant that the school needs less time to develop and implement its schoolwide program.

  29. School Improvement Plan • Tennessee’s school improvement planning process requires planning to be a continuous activity for all schools. • Effective programs incorporate planning into a continuous cycle of improvement.

  30. Adjust SIP • All schools (Title I and non-Title I) in Tennessee are required to regularly monitor and adjust their plans using updated school profile information, a reassessment of needs, and the results of formative and summative assessments.

  31. Resources • Your assigned NCLB Consultant • NCLB Act of 2001 • Title I Regulations

  32. Resources (continued) • USDOE Guidance Documents: -“Local Educational Agency Identification and Selection of School Attendance Areas and Schools and Allocation of Title I Funds to those Areas and Schools” (August, 2003) -“Targeted Assistance Schools” (April, 1996) -”Designing Schoolwide Programs” (March, 2006) Note- Be sure to review Appendix VIII: Finalizing the Schoolwide Plan- A Rubric for Monitoring and Evaluation. http://www.state.tn.us/education/fedprog/fptitle1.shtml

  33. Questions?

  34. Fiscal Aspects of Title I Schools Debra E. Owens, Ph.D.

  35. Fiscal Aspects of Title I Schools • Supplement not Supplant • Personnel Documentation • Supplies and Equipment • Incentives • Comparability • District Set-Asides

  36. Supplement Not Supplant • Can not use federal funds to pay for services, staff, programs, or materials that would otherwise be paid with state or local funds. • Always ask: “What would have happened in the absence of federal funds?”

  37. Presume Supplanting 3 Situations: • Used federal funds to provide services the LEA is required to make available under other federal, state, or local laws. • Used federal funds to provide services the LEA provided with state or local funds in the prior year. • Used Title I, Part A funds to provide the same services to Title I students that the LEA or SEA provides with state or local funds to nonparticipating students.

  38. Documentation to Avoid Supplanting Presumption Document: 1) Fiscal or programmatic documentation to confirm that, without fed funds, staff or other services would have been eliminated 2) State or local legislative action 3) Budget histories and information

  39. Documentation Cont. MUST SHOW • Actual reduction in state or local funds • Decision to eliminate service/position was made without regard to availability of federal funds (including reason decision was made)

  40. Documentation Cont. • HAVE copies of board meeting minutes that show position/program is eliminated. The reason decision was made (not because federal funds can pick them up). • Must eliminate staff positions or service. • Afterwards LEA can reinstate positions or program.

  41. Personnel Documentation • Certifications of Employment from 7/1 to 12/ 31 and 1/1 to 6/30 (SW and TA) • Principal Attestation for Title I Schools (SW and TA) • Staff in TA schools must only serve TA students • Multi-funded personnel must fill out PARs form to account for federal Title programs (like Title IA and IIA)

  42. Purchasing of Equipment & Supplies 4 Federal Cost Principles • Necessary- to improve academic achievement & part of school plan • Reasonable-cost, bids • Allocable-used for activities intended by funds • Legal-no prohibited items

  43. Use of Equipment After Termination of Federal Funds EDGAR 80.32 (c)(1) & (2) *Can use equipment as long as needed even if no more fed funds. *Make equipment available to others with current or prior fed funding if it doesn’t interfere with original use.

  44. Incentives • No student stipends are allowable • Title I teacher performance incentives are allowable only at high priority schools • Initial recruitment incentives are allowable at Title I schools

  45. Comparability • Remember that comparability still applies when adding staff to non-Title I versus Title I schools

  46. District Set-Asides • Homeless • 1% for parental involvement if grant over $500,000 in total Title I funds • Equitable Services for Private School Students • 10% Professional Development for High Priority School Improvement status • 20% for SES and PSC • Optional: Pre-K or Extended Year • Optional: District-wide activities-written description needed

  47. USDOE Guidance Title I Fiscal Issues: MOE, Comparabilty, Supplement, Not Supplant, Carryover, Consolidating Funds in SW, Grantback Requirements, Feb 2008 http://www.state.tn.us/education/fedprog/fpfiscalinfo.shtml Funds under Title I, Part A of the ESEA of 1965 under American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA), April 2009 http://www.state.tn.us/education/fedprog/fpfiscalinfo.shtml

  48. Questions?

  49. High Priority Title I SchoolsRita Fentress

  50. High Priority Schools • Title I vs. Non-Title I Schools • State law • NCLB • Both are provided with specially trained Exemplary Educators (EEs) • Focus on requirements for Title I High Priority Schools • Complicated • Monitored by NCLB staff • Receive Title I School Improvement Funds

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