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Published byGarry Pierce Modified over 8 years ago
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C&I 212 Dr. Brown
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Federal Role in Education Bill of Rights (10th Amendment) Morrill Acts Smith-Hughes Act (1917), George-Barden Act (1946) GI Bill (1944) National Defense Act (1958) Anti-discrimination acts (1964, 1972, 1973) ESEA – Title I (1965, IASA 1994, NCLB 2001)
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NCLB Rationale Close achievement gaps between students of different economic, racial, ethnic backgrounds Students should learn from highly qualified teachers All students should graduate from high school and achieve high standards Schools should be safe and drug free
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NCLB Principles Accountability Measure yearly progress of all students State-created standards Adequate yearly progress (AYP) Highly Qualified Teachers Research-based instruction “scientifically-based” research Local control and flexibility Can use 50% of fed $ to other programs Parental options Parents may transfer students to other schools
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AYP Basics Criteria: Math and reading assessment, test participation rate and other (attendance/graduation rate) Baseline was set by each state in 2001, with 12 years to achieve goal Test Scores: 40% (2003) – 100% (2014) Participation: 95% Graduation Rate: 65% (2003) – 85% (2014) All subgroups (larger that 45 students) must meet AYP or a subgroup may increase by 10% (Safe Harbor) Example; Illinois AYP Information; AYP Awards ExampleIllinois AYP InformationAYP Awards
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AYP Success and Failure Success is “rewarded” Failure: Published Improvement plan Professional development 2 years of failure: (Academic Early Warning) All of the above Students can transfer within the district 3 years of failure: (Academic Early Warning 1) All of the above Supplemental education 4 years or more: (Academic Watch 1, 2, 3+) Restructuring, replace staff, turn over operation to the state (5 years)
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Race to the Top - Overview Newest Federal Education initiative Competitive grants to states $20 - $700 Million (depending on state) Phase 1: Tennessee and Delaware ($820 million total) Phase 2: 10 states awarded ($3.4 billion) Illinois was a finalist in both phases “Phase 3”: 7 state were awarded funds Illinois will receive $43 million.
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Race to the Top – Reform Areas Adopting standards and assessments that prepare students to succeed in college and the workplace and to compete in the global economy; Building data systems that measure student growth and success, and inform teachers and principals about how they can improve instruction; Recruiting, developing, rewarding, and retaining effective teachers and principals, especially where they are needed most; and Turning around our lowest-achieving schools.
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