Discretionary Grant Programs, 44671-44673 [E6-12780]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 151 / Monday, August 7, 2006 / Notices
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[FR Doc. E6–12695 Filed 8–4–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Discretionary Grant Programs
Department of Education.
Notice of proposed priorities.
AGENCY:
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The Secretary of Education
proposes priorities that the Department
of Education (Department) may use for
any appropriate discretionary grant
program in fiscal year (FY) 2007 and in
FY 2008. We take this action to focus
Federal financial assistance on
expanding the number of programs and
projects Department-wide that support
activities in areas of greatest educational
need. Although we expect that these
priorities will have the greatest
applicability to programs authorized by
the Elementary and Secondary
Education Act of 1965 (as amended by
the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001),
we are establishing the priorities on a
Department-wide basis, so that
Department offices can use one or more
of these priorities in any discretionary
grant competition, as appropriate.
DATES: We must receive your comments
on or before September 6, 2006.
ADDRESSES: Address all comments about
these proposed priorities to Margo K.
Anderson, U.S. Department of
Education, 400 Maryland Avenue, SW.,
Room 4W311, Washington, DC 20202–
5910. If you prefer to send your
comments through the Internet, use the
following address: comments@ed.gov.
You must include the term
‘‘Department Priorities’’ in the subject
line of your electronic message.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Margo Anderson. Telephone: (202) 205–
3010 or via Internet at
Margo.Anderson@ed.gov.
If you use a telecommunications
device for the deaf (TDD), you may call
the Federal Relay Service (FRS) at
1–800–877–8339.
Individuals with disabilities may
obtain this document in an alternative
format (e.g., Braille, large print,
audiotape, or computer diskette) on
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:19 Aug 04, 2006
Jkt 208001
request to the contact person listed
under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Invitation To Comment
We invite you to submit comments
regarding these proposed priorities. To
ensure that your comments have
maximum effect in developing the
notice of final priorities, we urge you to
identify the specific proposed priority
that each comment addresses.
We invite you to assist us in
complying with the specific
requirements of Executive Order 12866
and its overall requirement of reducing
regulatory burden that might result from
these proposed priorities. Please let us
know of any further opportunities we
should take to reduce potential costs or
increase potential benefits while
preserving the effective and efficient
administration of the Department’s
programs.
During and after the comment period,
you may inspect all public comments
about these proposed priorities in room
4W333, 400 Maryland Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC, between the hours of
8:30 a.m. and 4 p.m., Eastern time,
Monday through Friday of each week
except Federal holidays.
Assistance to Individuals With
Disabilities in Reviewing the
Rulemaking Record
On request, we will supply an
appropriate aid, such as a reader or
print magnifier, to an individual with a
disability who needs assistance to
review the comments or other
documents in the public rulemaking
record for these proposed priorities. If
you want to schedule an appointment
for this type of aid, please contact the
person listed under FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT.
General
In the four years since the enactment
of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001,
there have been significant changes in
our educational system that provide a
strong framework for reaching the goal
that all students will be proficient in
reading/language arts and mathematics
by the year 2014. States have put in
place rigorous new accountability
systems and in this school year (2005–
2006) administered reading and
mathematics assessments covering all
students in grades 3 to 8 and at least
once for students in grades 10 to 12. By
school year 2007–2008, States will be
assessing students in science at least
once in each of three grade spans (3–5,
6–9, 10–12). A focus on professional
development and teacher qualifications
PO 00000
Frm 00067
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
44671
is helping States to ensure that
increasing numbers of students are
being taught by highly qualified
teachers. School districts are providing
new support and assistance to schools
in need of improvement, while making
available public school choice and
supplemental educational services
options to eligible students who attend
these schools.
National Assessment of Educational
Progress (NAEP) results for older
students provide a reminder of the need
to continue to emphasize high standards
and accountability for all students,
especially those in the higher grades.
The 2005 NAEP math results for 8th
graders, for example, are both
illustrative and alarming: less than onethird of 8th graders, and just 13 percent
of low-income 8th graders, scored at the
proficient level or above. High school
test scores in mathematics have barely
budged since the 1970s, and according
to the American College Testing, Inc.
(ACT), less than half of high school
graduates in 2005 were ready for
college-level math and science
coursework.
America’s rapidly changing economy
requires an educational system that is
producing high school graduates with
the skills needed to be successful in
postsecondary education and the
workforce. In addition to improving the
academic achievement of students in
mathematics and science, we must
expand the number of Americans
mastering foreign languages critical to
national security and to our
participation in the global economy.
High schools must develop a larger pool
of technically adept and numerically
literate Americans, a continual supply
of highly trained mathematicians,
scientists, and engineers, and more
students with higher levels of
proficiency in critical-need languages.
The Department believes that highquality professional development for
secondary school teachers is a critical
part of the solution, because it can help
ensure that these teachers have the
content knowledge and expertise
required to improve student
achievement.
Rigorous instruction, high standards,
and accountability for results are
helping to raise achievement in the
early grades. Now America must
complete the task. We must focus on
improving the mathematics and science
achievement of secondary school
students, expanding foreign language
learning to include critical-need
languages, providing teachers with
better training and support, helping
districts improve all their schools, and
ensuring that all students meet rigorous
E:\FR\FM\07AUN1.SGM
07AUN1
44672
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 151 / Monday, August 7, 2006 / Notices
State mathematics and science academic
standards and graduate from high
school. Student performance is not just
an education issue; it is an economic
issue, a civic issue, a social issue, and
a national security issue.
In addition to content-specific
priorities, the Secretary is proposing a
priority for collecting data to assess the
effect of projects on the academic
achievement of student participants
relative to appropriate comparison or
control groups. The Secretary believes
that interventions must be designed to
collect the best available data to
determine the impact of the proposed
intervention on student achievement
and to inform future improvement
efforts. Finally, to assist schools and
districts in using data effectively, we are
proposing a priority for projects that
will help educators use information
from State data systems to improve
student achievement or other
appropriate outcomes.
Discussion of Proposed Priorities
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
We will announce the final priorities
in a notice in the Federal Register. We
will determine the final priorities after
considering public comments on the
proposed priorities and other
information available to the Department.
This notice does not preclude the
Secretary from proposing or funding
additional priorities, subject to meeting
applicable rulemaking requirements.
Note: This notice does not solicit
applications. In any year in which we choose
to use one or more of these proposed
priorities, we invite applications for new
awards under the applicable program
through a notice in the Federal Register.
When inviting applications we designate the
priorities as absolute, competitive preference,
or invitational. The effect of each type of
priority follows:
Absolute priority: Under an absolute
priority we consider only applications that
meet the priority (34 CFR 75.105(c)(3)).
Competitive preference priority: Under a
competitive preference priority we give
competitive preference to an application by
either (1) awarding additional points,
depending on how well or the extent to
which the application meets the competitive
preference priority (34 CFR 75.105(c)(2)(i));
or (2) selecting an application that meets the
competitive priority over an application of
comparable merit that does not meet the
priority (34 CFR 75.105(c)(2)(ii)).
Invitational priority: Under an invitational
priority we are particularly interested in
applications that meet the invitational
priority. However, we do not give an
application that meets the invitational
priority a competitive or absolute preference
over other applications (34 CFR 75.105(c)(1)).
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:19 Aug 04, 2006
Jkt 208001
Priorities
Executive Order 12866
The Secretary proposes priorities that
the Department may use for
discretionary grant competitions in FY
2007 and FY 2008, as appropriate. The
Secretary intends that these priorities
will allow program participants and the
Department to focus limited Federal
resources on areas of greatest
educational need. The Secretary
recognizes that some of the priorities
will not be appropriate for particular
programs.
Proposed Priority 1—Mathematics.
Projects that support activities to enable
students to achieve proficiency or
advanced proficiency in mathematics.
Proposed Priority 2—Science. Projects
that support activities to enable students
to achieve proficiency or advanced
proficiency in science.
Proposed Priority 3—Critical-Need
Languages. Projects that support
activities to enable students to achieve
proficiency or advanced proficiency in
one or more of the following less
commonly taught languages: Arabic,
Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Russian, and
languages in the Indic, Iranian, and
Turkic language families.
Proposed Priority 4—Secondary
Schools. Projects that support activities
and interventions aimed at improving
the academic achievement of secondary
school students who are at greatest risk
of not meeting challenging State
academic standards and not completing
high school.
Proposed Priority 5—Professional
Development for Secondary School
Teachers. Projects that support highquality professional development for
secondary school teachers to help these
teachers improve student academic
achievement.
Proposed Priority 6—School Districts
with Schools in Need of Improvement,
Corrective Action, or Restructuring.
Projects that help school districts
implement academic and structural
interventions in schools that have been
identified for improvement, corrective
action, or restructuring under the
Elementary and Secondary Education
Act of 1965, as amended by the No
Child Left Behind Act of 2001.
Proposed Priority 7—Student
Achievement Data. Projects that collect
pre- and post-intervention test data to
assess the effect of the projects on the
academic achievement of student
participants relative to appropriate
comparison or control groups.
Proposed Priority 8—State Data
Systems. Projects that help educators
use information from State data systems
to improve student achievement or
other appropriate outcomes.
This notice of proposed priorities has
been reviewed in accordance with
Executive Order 12866. Under the terms
of the order, we have assessed the
potential costs and benefits of this
regulatory action.
The potential costs associated with
the notice of proposed priorities are
those resulting from statutory
requirements and those we have
determined as necessary for
administering the Department’s
discretionary grant programs effectively
and efficiently.
In assessing the potential costs and
benefits—both quantitative and
qualitative—of this notice of proposed
priorities, we have determined that the
benefits of the proposed priorities
justify the costs.
We have also determined that this
regulatory action does not unduly
interfere with State, local, and tribal
governments in the exercise of their
governmental functions.
PO 00000
Frm 00068
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Executive Order 12372
Some of the programs affected by
these proposed priorities are subject to
Executive Order 12372 and the
regulations in 34 CFR part 79. One of
the objectives of the Executive order is
to foster an intergovernmental
partnership and a strengthened
federalism. The Executive order relies
on processes developed by State and
local governments for coordination and
review of proposed Federal financial
assistance.
This document provides early
notification of our specific plans and
actions for these programs.
Electronic Access to This Document
You may view this document, as well
as all other Department of Education
documents published in the Federal
Register, in text or Adobe Portable
Document Format (PDF) on the Internet
at the following site: www.ed.gov/news/
fedregister.
To use PDF you must have Adobe
Acrobat Reader, which is available free
at this site. If you have questions about
using PDF, call the U.S. Government
Printing Office (GPO), toll free, at 1–
888–293–6498; or in the Washington,
DC, area at (202) 512–1530.
Note: The official version of this document
is the document published in the Federal
Register. Free Internet access to the official
edition of the Federal Register and the Code
of Federal Regulations is available on GPO
Access at: https://www.gpoaccess.gov/nara/
index.html
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Number does not apply.)
E:\FR\FM\07AUN1.SGM
07AUN1
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 151 / Monday, August 7, 2006 / Notices
Program Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1221e–3; 20
U.S.C. 6301 et. seq.
Dated: August 1, 2006.
Margaret Spellings,
Secretary of Education.
[FR Doc. E6–12780 Filed 8–4–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Safe and Drug-Free Schools and
Communities Advisory Committee
Office of Safe and Drug-Free
Schools, Department of Education.
ACTION: Notice of open meeting.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This notice sets forth the
schedule and proposed agenda of an
upcoming open meeting of the Safe and
Drug-Free Schools and Communities
Advisory Committee. The notice also
describes the functions of the
Committee. Notice of this meeting is
required by section 10(a)(2) of the
Federal Advisory Committee Act and is
intended to notify the public of their
opportunity to attend.
DATES: Monday, August 21, 2006, and
Tuesday, August 22, 2006.
Time: August 21, 2006: 8:30 a.m. to 5
p.m.; August 22, 2006: 8 a.m. to 11:30
a.m.
ADDRESSES: The Committee will meet at
the U.S. Department of Education, 400
Maryland Avenue, SW., Barnard
Auditorium, Washington, DC.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Catherine Davis, Executive Director,
Safe and Drug Free Schools and
Communities Advisory Committee, U.S.
Department of Education, 400 Maryland
Avenue, SW., Room 1E110, Washington,
DC 20202–3510; telephone: (202) 205–
4169, or e-mail at OSDFS@ed.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Committee was established to provide
advice to the Secretary on Federal, State
and local programs designated to create
safe and drug-free schools, and on
issues related to crisis planning. The
focus for this meeting is the Safe and
Drug Free Schools and Communities
State Grants Programs, a formula grant
program. The agenda will include panel
presentations by invited speakers
offering an overview of the program and
looking at opportunities to strengthen
and improve it in order to ensure that
schools and communities are
implementing the most effective
programs and interventions, and are
prepared to meet current and future
needs of students. Further, the
Committee will address strategies for
accomplishing their mission as stated in
the committee charter.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:19 Aug 04, 2006
Jkt 208001
Individuals who will need
accommodations for a disability in order
to attend the meeting (e.g., interpreting
services, assistive listening devices, or
materials in alternative format) should
notify Catherine Davis at
OSDFSC@ed.gov or 202–205–4169 no
later than August 7, 2006. We will
attempt to meet requests for
accommodations after this date but
cannot guarantee their availability. The
meeting site is accessible to individuals
with disabilities.
Individuals interested in attending the
meeting must register in advance
because limited space is available at the
meeting site. Please notify Catherine
Davis at OSDFSC@ed.gov or 202–205–
4169 of your intention to attend the
meeting.
Opportunities for public comment are
available on August 22 from 8:40–9:15
a.m. on a first come, first served basis.
Comments presented at the meeting
must be limited to 5 minutes in length.
Written comments that accompany oral
remarks are optional. Five copies are
recommended and should be submitted
to the committee Chairman.
Request for Written Comments: We
invite the public to submit written
comments relevant to the focus of the
Advisory Committee. We would like to
receive written comments from
members of the public no later than
April 30, 2007.
Submit all comments to the
Advisory Committee using one of the
following methods: 1. Internet. We
encourage the public to submit
comments through the Internet to the
following address: OSDFSC@ed.gov. 2.
Mail. The public may also submit your
comments via mail to Catherine Davis,
Office of Safe and Drug Free Schools,
U.S. Department of Education, 400
Maryland Avenue, SW., Room 1E110,
Washington, DC 20202. Due to delays in
mail delivery caused by heightened
security, please allow adequate time for
the mail to be received.
Records are kept of all Committee
proceedings and are available for public
inspection at the Office of Safe and Drug
Free Schools, U.S. Department of
Education, 400 Maryland Avenue, SW.,
Room 1E110, Washington, DC 20202,
from the hours of 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Eastern Standard Time.
ADDRESSES:
Ray Simon,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 06–6710 Filed 8–4–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000–01–M
PO 00000
Frm 00069
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
44673
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Notice of Request for Expressions of
Interest in an Advanced Burner
Reactor To Support the Global Nuclear
Energy Partnership
Office of Nuclear Energy,
Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of request for expressions
of interest.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Based upon feedback since
the President of the United States
announced the Global Nuclear Energy
Partnership (GNEP) in February 2006,
the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) is
seeking Expressions of Interest (EOI)
from domestic and international
industry in building an Advanced
Burner Reactor (ABR). An ABR in the
United States would establish a fast
reactor capability to be used to
transmute fuel and consume transuranic
elements within the fuel, generate
electricity, and support implementation
of GNEP. DOE is also seeking to define
the interest of industry to build upon
their proven capabilities and participate
in demonstrating spent nuclear fuel
(SNF) recycling technologies that meet
GNEP goals. This EOI will help inform
DOE’s GNEP Program as to those issues
that industry and potential host sites
consider important to the construction
of sustainable, commercial-scale SNF
recycling technologies that meet GNEP
objectives. The information gained from
this EOI will be used to create Requests
for Proposals (RFP) for the proposed
ABR.
DATES: Interested parties wishing to
submit an EOI should do so in writing
by September 8, 2006, to ensure their
input is considered. A briefing for
respondents to learn about DOE’s
baseline plan and answer EOI-related
questions will be held on August 14,
2006, 8 am–12 pm, in the Washington,
DC metropolitan area. The specific
meeting location will be announced on
the GNEP Web site, https://
www.gnep.energy.gov. Please indicate
your interest in attending the briefing by
sending an e-mail indicating your intent
to attend to
GNEP_EOI_RSVP@nuclear.energy.gov. It
is recognized that GNEP is moving
forward on an aggressive schedule that
will task all of the responders’ abilities
to provide quality information in a short
period of time. DOE believes that GNEP
can help to revitalize the U.S. nuclear
industry and improve its global
competitive position. Early participation
by industry in this effort will greatly
maximize GNEP’s success.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: By
postal mail, Mr. John F. Gross, Mail
E:\FR\FM\07AUN1.SGM
07AUN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 151 (Monday, August 7, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 44671-44673]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E6-12780]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Discretionary Grant Programs
AGENCY: Department of Education.
ACTION: Notice of proposed priorities.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Secretary of Education proposes priorities that the
Department of Education (Department) may use for any appropriate
discretionary grant program in fiscal year (FY) 2007 and in FY 2008. We
take this action to focus Federal financial assistance on expanding the
number of programs and projects Department-wide that support activities
in areas of greatest educational need. Although we expect that these
priorities will have the greatest applicability to programs authorized
by the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (as amended by
the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001), we are establishing the
priorities on a Department-wide basis, so that Department offices can
use one or more of these priorities in any discretionary grant
competition, as appropriate.
DATES: We must receive your comments on or before September 6, 2006.
ADDRESSES: Address all comments about these proposed priorities to
Margo K. Anderson, U.S. Department of Education, 400 Maryland Avenue,
SW., Room 4W311, Washington, DC 20202-5910. If you prefer to send your
comments through the Internet, use the following address:
comments@ed.gov.
You must include the term ``Department Priorities'' in the subject
line of your electronic message.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Margo Anderson. Telephone: (202) 205-
3010 or via Internet at Margo.Anderson@ed.gov.
If you use a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD), you may
call the Federal Relay Service (FRS) at 1-800-877-8339.
Individuals with disabilities may obtain this document in an
alternative format (e.g., Braille, large print, audiotape, or computer
diskette) on request to the contact person listed under FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Invitation To Comment
We invite you to submit comments regarding these proposed
priorities. To ensure that your comments have maximum effect in
developing the notice of final priorities, we urge you to identify the
specific proposed priority that each comment addresses.
We invite you to assist us in complying with the specific
requirements of Executive Order 12866 and its overall requirement of
reducing regulatory burden that might result from these proposed
priorities. Please let us know of any further opportunities we should
take to reduce potential costs or increase potential benefits while
preserving the effective and efficient administration of the
Department's programs.
During and after the comment period, you may inspect all public
comments about these proposed priorities in room 4W333, 400 Maryland
Avenue, SW., Washington, DC, between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4 p.m.,
Eastern time, Monday through Friday of each week except Federal
holidays.
Assistance to Individuals With Disabilities in Reviewing the Rulemaking
Record
On request, we will supply an appropriate aid, such as a reader or
print magnifier, to an individual with a disability who needs
assistance to review the comments or other documents in the public
rulemaking record for these proposed priorities. If you want to
schedule an appointment for this type of aid, please contact the person
listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
General
In the four years since the enactment of the No Child Left Behind
Act of 2001, there have been significant changes in our educational
system that provide a strong framework for reaching the goal that all
students will be proficient in reading/language arts and mathematics by
the year 2014. States have put in place rigorous new accountability
systems and in this school year (2005-2006) administered reading and
mathematics assessments covering all students in grades 3 to 8 and at
least once for students in grades 10 to 12. By school year 2007-2008,
States will be assessing students in science at least once in each of
three grade spans (3-5, 6-9, 10-12). A focus on professional
development and teacher qualifications is helping States to ensure that
increasing numbers of students are being taught by highly qualified
teachers. School districts are providing new support and assistance to
schools in need of improvement, while making available public school
choice and supplemental educational services options to eligible
students who attend these schools.
National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) results for
older students provide a reminder of the need to continue to emphasize
high standards and accountability for all students, especially those in
the higher grades. The 2005 NAEP math results for 8th graders, for
example, are both illustrative and alarming: less than one-third of 8th
graders, and just 13 percent of low-income 8th graders, scored at the
proficient level or above. High school test scores in mathematics have
barely budged since the 1970s, and according to the American College
Testing, Inc. (ACT), less than half of high school graduates in 2005
were ready for college-level math and science coursework.
America's rapidly changing economy requires an educational system
that is producing high school graduates with the skills needed to be
successful in postsecondary education and the workforce. In addition to
improving the academic achievement of students in mathematics and
science, we must expand the number of Americans mastering foreign
languages critical to national security and to our participation in the
global economy. High schools must develop a larger pool of technically
adept and numerically literate Americans, a continual supply of highly
trained mathematicians, scientists, and engineers, and more students
with higher levels of proficiency in critical-need languages. The
Department believes that high-quality professional development for
secondary school teachers is a critical part of the solution, because
it can help ensure that these teachers have the content knowledge and
expertise required to improve student achievement.
Rigorous instruction, high standards, and accountability for
results are helping to raise achievement in the early grades. Now
America must complete the task. We must focus on improving the
mathematics and science achievement of secondary school students,
expanding foreign language learning to include critical-need languages,
providing teachers with better training and support, helping districts
improve all their schools, and ensuring that all students meet rigorous
[[Page 44672]]
State mathematics and science academic standards and graduate from high
school. Student performance is not just an education issue; it is an
economic issue, a civic issue, a social issue, and a national security
issue.
In addition to content-specific priorities, the Secretary is
proposing a priority for collecting data to assess the effect of
projects on the academic achievement of student participants relative
to appropriate comparison or control groups. The Secretary believes
that interventions must be designed to collect the best available data
to determine the impact of the proposed intervention on student
achievement and to inform future improvement efforts. Finally, to
assist schools and districts in using data effectively, we are
proposing a priority for projects that will help educators use
information from State data systems to improve student achievement or
other appropriate outcomes.
Discussion of Proposed Priorities
We will announce the final priorities in a notice in the Federal
Register. We will determine the final priorities after considering
public comments on the proposed priorities and other information
available to the Department. This notice does not preclude the
Secretary from proposing or funding additional priorities, subject to
meeting applicable rulemaking requirements.
Note: This notice does not solicit applications. In any year in
which we choose to use one or more of these proposed priorities, we
invite applications for new awards under the applicable program
through a notice in the Federal Register. When inviting applications
we designate the priorities as absolute, competitive preference, or
invitational. The effect of each type of priority follows:
Absolute priority: Under an absolute priority we consider only
applications that meet the priority (34 CFR 75.105(c)(3)).
Competitive preference priority: Under a competitive preference
priority we give competitive preference to an application by either
(1) awarding additional points, depending on how well or the extent
to which the application meets the competitive preference priority
(34 CFR 75.105(c)(2)(i)); or (2) selecting an application that meets
the competitive priority over an application of comparable merit
that does not meet the priority (34 CFR 75.105(c)(2)(ii)).
Invitational priority: Under an invitational priority we are
particularly interested in applications that meet the invitational
priority. However, we do not give an application that meets the
invitational priority a competitive or absolute preference over
other applications (34 CFR 75.105(c)(1)).
Priorities
The Secretary proposes priorities that the Department may use for
discretionary grant competitions in FY 2007 and FY 2008, as
appropriate. The Secretary intends that these priorities will allow
program participants and the Department to focus limited Federal
resources on areas of greatest educational need. The Secretary
recognizes that some of the priorities will not be appropriate for
particular programs.
Proposed Priority 1--Mathematics. Projects that support activities
to enable students to achieve proficiency or advanced proficiency in
mathematics.
Proposed Priority 2--Science. Projects that support activities to
enable students to achieve proficiency or advanced proficiency in
science.
Proposed Priority 3--Critical-Need Languages. Projects that support
activities to enable students to achieve proficiency or advanced
proficiency in one or more of the following less commonly taught
languages: Arabic, Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Russian, and languages in
the Indic, Iranian, and Turkic language families.
Proposed Priority 4--Secondary Schools. Projects that support
activities and interventions aimed at improving the academic
achievement of secondary school students who are at greatest risk of
not meeting challenging State academic standards and not completing
high school.
Proposed Priority 5--Professional Development for Secondary School
Teachers. Projects that support high-quality professional development
for secondary school teachers to help these teachers improve student
academic achievement.
Proposed Priority 6--School Districts with Schools in Need of
Improvement, Corrective Action, or Restructuring. Projects that help
school districts implement academic and structural interventions in
schools that have been identified for improvement, corrective action,
or restructuring under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of
1965, as amended by the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001.
Proposed Priority 7--Student Achievement Data. Projects that
collect pre- and post-intervention test data to assess the effect of
the projects on the academic achievement of student participants
relative to appropriate comparison or control groups.
Proposed Priority 8--State Data Systems. Projects that help
educators use information from State data systems to improve student
achievement or other appropriate outcomes.
Executive Order 12866
This notice of proposed priorities has been reviewed in accordance
with Executive Order 12866. Under the terms of the order, we have
assessed the potential costs and benefits of this regulatory action.
The potential costs associated with the notice of proposed
priorities are those resulting from statutory requirements and those we
have determined as necessary for administering the Department's
discretionary grant programs effectively and efficiently.
In assessing the potential costs and benefits--both quantitative
and qualitative--of this notice of proposed priorities, we have
determined that the benefits of the proposed priorities justify the
costs.
We have also determined that this regulatory action does not unduly
interfere with State, local, and tribal governments in the exercise of
their governmental functions.
Executive Order 12372
Some of the programs affected by these proposed priorities are
subject to Executive Order 12372 and the regulations in 34 CFR part 79.
One of the objectives of the Executive order is to foster an
intergovernmental partnership and a strengthened federalism. The
Executive order relies on processes developed by State and local
governments for coordination and review of proposed Federal financial
assistance.
This document provides early notification of our specific plans and
actions for these programs.
Electronic Access to This Document
You may view this document, as well as all other Department of
Education documents published in the Federal Register, in text or Adobe
Portable Document Format (PDF) on the Internet at the following site:
www.ed.gov/news/fedregister.
To use PDF you must have Adobe Acrobat Reader, which is available
free at this site. If you have questions about using PDF, call the U.S.
Government Printing Office (GPO), toll free, at 1-888-293-6498; or in
the Washington, DC, area at (202) 512-1530.
Note: The official version of this document is the document
published in the Federal Register. Free Internet access to the
official edition of the Federal Register and the Code of Federal
Regulations is available on GPO Access at: https://www.gpoaccess.gov/
nara/
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Number does not apply.)
[[Page 44673]]
Program Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1221e-3; 20 U.S.C. 6301 et. seq.
Dated: August 1, 2006.
Margaret Spellings,
Secretary of Education.
[FR Doc. E6-12780 Filed 8-4-06; 8:45 am]
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