Career and Technical Education Program-Promoting Rigorous Career and Technical Education Programs of Study, 29732-29739 [2010-12802]
Download as PDF
29732
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 102 / Thursday, May 27, 2010 / Notices
use a telecommunications device for the
deaf (TDD) may call the Federal
Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 1–
800–877–8339.
[FR Doc. 2010–12796 Filed 5–26–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000–01–P
Submission for OMB Review;
Comment Request
Department of Education.
The Acting Director,
Information Collection Clearance
Division, Regulatory Information
Management Services, Office of
Management invites comments on the
submission for OMB review as required
by the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995.
DATES: Interested persons are invited to
submit comments on or before June 28,
2010.
ADDRESSES: Written comments should
be addressed to the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Attention: Education Desk Officer,
Office of Management and Budget, 725
17th Street, NW., Room 10222, New
Executive Office Building, Washington,
DC 20503, be faxed to (202) 395–5806 or
e-mailed to
oira_submission@omb.eop.gov with a
cc: to ICDocketMgr@ed.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section
3506 of the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (44 U.S.C. Chapter 35) requires
that the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) provide interested
Federal agencies and the public an early
opportunity to comment on information
collection requests. OMB may amend or
waive the requirement for public
consultation to the extent that public
participation in the approval process
would defeat the purpose of the
information collection, violate State or
Federal law, or substantially interfere
with any agency’s ability to perform its
statutory obligations. The Acting
Director, Information Collection
Clearance Division, Regulatory
Information Management Services,
Office of Management, publishes that
notice containing proposed information
collection requests prior to submission
of these requests to OMB. Each
proposed information collection,
grouped by office, contains the
following: (1) Type of review requested,
e.g. new, revision, extension, existing or
reinstatement; (2) Title; (3) Summary of
the collection; (4) Description of the
need for, and proposed use of, the
information; (5) Respondents and
frequency of collection; and (6)
wwoods2 on DSK1DXX6B1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:31 May 26, 2010
Jkt 220001
Dated: May 24, 2010.
James Hyler,
Acting Director, Information Collection
Clearance Division, Regulatory Information
Management Services, Office of Management.
Institute of Education Sciences
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
AGENCY:
Reporting and/or Recordkeeping
burden. OMB invites public comment.
Type of Review: Revision.
Title: FRSS 99: District Fast Response
Survey of Dropout Prevention.
Frequency: Once.
Affected Public: Individuals or
household; State, Local, or Tribal Gov’t,
SEAs or LEAs.
Reporting and Recordkeeping Hour
Burden:
Responses: 1,980.
Burden Hours: 435.
Abstract: The National Center for
Education Statistics (NCES), U.S.
Department of Education (ED), proposes
to employ the Fast Response Survey
System (FRSS) to conduct a district
survey about dropout prevention
services and programs. This survey will
provide the first nationally
representative data on this topic by
capturing a current snapshot of dropout
prevention services and programs
available within the nation’s public
school districts. In addition, the survey
will cover factors and methods used to
identify students at risk of dropping out,
mentoring and transition supports used
by the district, the entities with which
districts work in their dropout
prevention efforts, information provided
to students who appear highly likely to
drop out, follow-up efforts when a
student drops out, and information used
by the district in determining whether
to implement additional dropout
prevention efforts district-wide.
Requests for copies of the information
collection submission for OMB review
may be accessed from https://
edicsweb.ed.gov, by selecting the
‘‘Browse Pending Collections’’ link and
by clicking on link number 4312. When
you access the information collection,
click on ‘‘Download Attachments ’’ to
view. Written requests for information
should be addressed to U.S. Department
of Education, 400 Maryland Avenue,
SW., LBJ, Washington, DC 20202–4537.
Requests may also be electronically
mailed to the Internet address
ICDocketMgr@ed.gov or faxed to 202–
401–0920. Please specify the complete
title of the information collection when
making your request.
Comments regarding burden and/or
the collection activity requirements
should be electronically mailed to
ICDocketMgr@ed.gov. Individuals who
use a telecommunications device for the
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
deaf (TDD) may call the Federal
Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 1–
800–877–8339.
[FR Doc. 2010–12797 Filed 5–26–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Career and Technical Education
Program—Promoting Rigorous Career
and Technical Education Programs of
Study
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
(CFDA) Number: 84.051C.
AGENCY: Office of Vocational and Adult
Education, Department of Education.
ACTION: Notice of proposed priorities,
requirements, and selection criteria.
SUMMARY: The Assistant Secretary for
Vocational and Adult Education
proposes priorities, requirements, and
selection criteria for a program
promoting rigorous career and technical
education programs of study (POSs)
through the use of ten key components
based on the ‘‘Program of Study Design
Framework’’ (Framework). We take this
action to promote and improve State
and local development and
implementation of career and technical
education (CTE) POSs that link
secondary and postsecondary education,
combine academic and career and
technical education in a structured
sequence of courses that progress from
broad foundation skills to more
occupationally specific courses (e.g., the
States’ Career Clusters, initially funded
and launched by the Department (see
https://www.careerclusters.org/
index.php), and offer students the
opportunities to earn postsecondary
credits for courses taken in high school
that lead to a postsecondary credential,
certificate, or degree.
DATES: We must receive your comments
on or before June 28, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Submit all comments about
this notice to Laura Messenger, U.S.
Department of Education, 400 Maryland
Avenue, SW., room 11028, Potomac
Center Plaza, Washington, DC 20202–
7241.
If you prefer to send your comments
by e-mail, use the following address:
laura.messenger@ed.gov. You must
include the term ‘‘POS Notice’’ in the
subject line of your electronic message.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Laura Messenger. Telephone: 202–245–
7840 or by e-mail:
laura.messenger@ed.gov.
If you use a telecommunications
device for the deaf (TDD), call the
Federal Relay Service (FRS), toll free, at
1–800–877–8339.
E:\FR\FM\27MYN1.SGM
27MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 102 / Thursday, May 27, 2010 / Notices
wwoods2 on DSK1DXX6B1PROD with NOTICES
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Invitation to Comment: We invite you
to submit comments regarding this
notice. To ensure that your comments
have maximum effect in developing the
notice of final priorities, requirements,
and selection criteria, we urge you to
identify clearly the specific proposed
priority, requirement, or selection
criterion that each comment addresses.
The Assistant Secretary is also
particularly interested in receiving
comments on the Program of Study
(POS) Design Framework set forth in
this notice. The Framework is available
on the Department’s Perkins
Collaborative Resource Network (PCRN)
Web site at: https://cte.ed.gov/
nationalinitiatives/
rposdesignframework.cfm. The
Assistant Secretary also seeks comment
on the status of a State’s capacity and
plan to collect employment data as part
of a longitudinal data system linked to
a State’s educational data system.
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, requirements,
and selection criteria. Please let us
know of any further ways we could
reduce potential costs or increase
potential benefits while preserving the
effective and efficient administration of
the program.
During and after the comment period,
you may inspect all public comments
about this notice in room 11028, 550
12th Street, SW., Washington, DC,
between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:00
p.m., Washington, DC time, Monday
through Friday of each week except
Federal holidays.
Assistance to Individuals with
Disabilities in Reviewing the
Rulemaking Record: On request, we will
provide an appropriate accommodation
or auxiliary aid to an individual with a
disability who needs assistance to
review the comments or other
documents in the public rulemaking
record for this notice. If you want to
schedule an appointment for this type of
accommodation or auxiliary aid, please
contact the person listed under FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
Purpose of Program: The Promoting
Rigorous Career and Technical
Education Programs of Study program is
authorized under section 114(c)(1) of
the Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical
Education Act of 2006 (Act). Under this
section, the Secretary is authorized to
carry out research, development,
dissemination, evaluation and
assessment, capacity building, and
technical assistance with regard to CTE
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:26 May 26, 2010
Jkt 220001
programs under the Act. Through this
program, we intend to promote and
improve State and local development
and implementation of CTE POSs that
link secondary and postsecondary
education, combine academic and
career and technical education in a
structured sequence of courses that
progress from broad foundation skills to
more occupationally specific courses,
offer students the opportunities to earn
postsecondary credits for courses taken
in high school, and lead to a
postsecondary credential, certificate, or
degree.
General Background:
To help States and local agencies
meet the requirements of section
122(c)(1)(A) of the Act to provide career
and technical programs of study, we
held the first competition, entitled
‘‘Promoting Rigorous Career and
Technical Education Programs of Study
through Statewide or Multi-State
Articulation Agreements’’ for this
program in 2008. The proposals in this
notice are informed by our experience
with that competition and administering
the six grants that were funded through
that competition.
Subsequent to the 2008 competition,
in early 2009 and in response to
requests for assistance in developing
and implementing POSs from State and
local program administrators and
national technical assistance providers,
OVAE reviewed extant literature and
case study research and developed a
draft POS Design Framework. The draft
Framework identified 10 components
that, taken together, would support the
development and implementation of
rigorous and effective POSs. On June 11,
2009, the Office of Vocational and Adult
Education (OVAE) convened a meeting
of leading POS experts to gather
feedback and input on the draft
Framework. The experts included
representatives from organizations such
as the Association for Career and
Technical Education, the National
Association of State Directors of Career
and Technical Education Consortium
(NASDCTEc), the National Governors
Association, the National Research
Center for Career and Technical
Education (NRCCTE), the Academy for
Educational Development (AED), the
National Career Pathways Network, the
League for Innovation in the
Community College, and MPR
Associates, Inc.
At the meeting, participants agreed to
work collaboratively with OVAE to
complete a final version of the
Framework and disseminate it for use
by their organizations and by others
engaged in POS development and
implementation. In collaboration with
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
29733
major national associations and
organizations, OVAE completed the
Framework in January 2010.
NASDCTEc, NRCCTE, AED, and MPR
Associates, Inc. are currently using it to
provide technical assistance to their
POS projects with States and localities.
Most of the proposed priorities,
requirements, and selection criteria in
this notice are based on the Framework.
Some of the proposals in this notice
are consistent with three of the four
areas the Secretary has identified as key
for educational reform. The proposed
requirement that States and localities
adopt rigorous college and career
readiness standards that define what
students are expected to know and be
able to do to enter and advance in
college, their careers, or both, is
consistent with the Secretary’s goals in
the area of standards and assessments.
The proposed requirement for
innovative and creative instructional
approaches that enable teachers to
integrate academic and technical
instruction is consistent with the
Secretary’s goals for teacher
effectiveness, as is the proposed
requirement that projects provide
sustained, intensive, and focused
professional development opportunities
so as to ensure that teachers have the
necessary content knowledge to align
and integrate curriculum and
instruction. The proposed requirement
that States and localities use welldesigned State longitudinal data
systems that yield valid and reliable
data on a variety of secondary,
postsecondary, and employment
outcomes for individual students is
consistent with the Secretary’s goals for
improving the capacity of Statewide
longitudinal data systems.
The Assistant Secretary plans to make
awards under the next POS competition
for a 4-year project period.
Program Authority: 20 U.S.C.
2324(c)(1).
Proposed Priorities:
Types of Priorities:
When inviting applications for a
competition using one or more
priorities, we designate the type of each
priority as absolute, competitive
preference, or invitational through a
notice in the Federal Register. 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 (1) awarding additional
points, depending on the extent to
which the application meets the priority
E:\FR\FM\27MYN1.SGM
27MYN1
29734
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 102 / Thursday, May 27, 2010 / Notices
wwoods2 on DSK1DXX6B1PROD with NOTICES
(34 CFR 75.105(c)(2)(i)); or (2) selecting
an application that meets the 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
priority. However, we do not give an
application that meets the priority
preference over other applications (34
CFR 75.105(c)(1)).
This notice contains one proposed
priority.
Proposed Competitive Preference
Priority—Commitment to the Project
Background:
Section 122(c)(1) of the Act requires
States to offer CTE POSs, which may be
adopted by local educational agencies
(LEAs) and postsecondary institutions
as an option to students (and their
parents, as appropriate), when planning
for and completing coursework for
career and technical content areas.
Under section 134(b)(3)(A) of the Act,
each local recipient of funds must offer
the appropriate courses of not less than
one career and technical program of
study described in section 122(c)(1)(A).
To align project activities with a State’s
ongoing POS efforts and to demonstrate
a State’s commitment of staff and other
resources to fully executing the goals of
the proposed project, the Assistant
Secretary is proposing a priority for
applications that propose to contribute
funds from other sources of funds to the
total cost of the project.
Proposed Competitive Preference
Priority:
To meet this priority, the applicant
must propose a budget that describes
how the State will contribute 30 percent
of the total cost of the project. For these
purposes, the applicant may use—
(a) State leadership funds awarded
under section 111 of the Act and as
specified in section 112(a)(1) of the Act;
(b) Non-Federal contributions
including in-kind contributions such as
use of facilities, equipment, supplies,
services, and other resources; or
(c) A combination of State leadership
funds and non-Federal contributions.
Proposed Requirements:
Background:
Selected Program of Study. Since the
Act was reauthorized in 2006, States
and local recipients have worked to
meet the POS requirements of section
122(c)(1) of the Act. We believe that the
development of the Framework will
provide significant support for those
efforts. The Framework reflects the
collective thinking of the Department
and the primary organizations and
associations engaged in POS
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:26 May 26, 2010
Jkt 220001
development over the past several years,
and identifies 10 components that
support the development and
implementation of rigorous and
effective POSs. To date, POSs have
differed widely from State to State.
POSs may also differ widely from
school district to school district within
a State, as well as from school to school
within a district. To ensure the rigor of
funded POSs and consistency in their
design and implementation, we propose
to require States receiving grant awards
under this program to implement a POS
that is built and sustained with the 10
specific components in the Framework.
We note that in the 2008 competition,
we provided funding to help States use
statewide articulation agreements
between secondary education and
postsecondary institutions as a primary
strategy for implementing POSs. In the
proposed Selected Program of Study
requirement, we refer to the statewide
articulation agreements as ‘‘Credit
Transfer Agreements’’ and the use of
such agreements is one of the 10
components in the Framework. As
proposed, credit transfer agreements
would support the proper alignment of
standards, curriculum, and instruction
across educational levels and promote,
to the extent possible, the awarding of
postsecondary credit for courses taken
during high school.
The 2008 competition also
emphasized the creation of partnerships
to ensure the rigor and quality of POSs.
Through the experience gained from the
work of the six projects funded under
the 2008 competition, the POS efforts
underway in other States, and the
experience of leading POS experts, we
have gained a better understanding of
the level and complexity of the work
required for effective POS
implementation and of the program
components that are necessary for the
development and implementation of
rigorous POSs. Accordingly, the
Framework includes, and we are
proposing in this requirement that
States create, partnerships with
education, business, and other key
stakeholders.
Existing Technical Skills
Assessments. States currently report on
the technical skill attainment of CTE
students at the secondary and
postsecondary levels. In some cases,
States are using third-party industryrecognized assessments to determine
technical skill attainment. Where such
assessments are not available,
particularly at the secondary level,
States have sought to develop their own
assessments. When the assessments are
based on industry standards, they may
result in the granting of high school
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
credit. When the assessments are based
on industry standards and developed
through collaboration between
secondary and postsecondary
institutions, they may result in the
granting of postsecondary credit for high
school students.
The Department recognizes that
assessment development can be both
costly and time-consuming.1 As a result,
given the limited funding available
under this program and our intent to
evaluate the progress of students
enrolled in a POS, we propose to require
States receiving grant awards under this
program to implement a POS for which
valid and reliable technical skills
assessments (either industry-recognized
assessments or State-developed or Stateapproved assessments based on industry
standards that grant high school or
postsecondary credit, or both) have been
developed.
Local Implementation. We also
propose to require funded States to
implement the selected POS in at least
three LEAs that contain high schools, in
concert with their postsecondary
partners, beginning no later than the
start of the academic year corresponding
to year 2 of the grant. The applicant
must include a letter of commitment
from each LEA, expressing its interest in
participating in the project and its
commitment to implement the selected
POS as prescribed by the State in years
2 through 4 of the grant. If an LEA
contains more than one high school, it
would be required to implement the
selected POS in at least one of its high
schools. To the extent feasible, the LEAs
must implement the POS in at least one
urban, one suburban, and one rural
community. If an LEA currently does
not have all 10 components in place, the
State applicant must provide an
assurance that each participating LEA
will have all 10 components in place to
support the selected POS when it is
implemented in year 2. To achieve this
end, we are proposing to require that
CTE staff from the funded States
provide technical assistance to the
participating LEAs during the first year
of the project in order to strengthen
weak components or incorporate
1 For example, the Department recently
announced, as part of its Race to the Top
Assessment program, a High School Course
Assessment program that will support consortia of
States in the development of new or adapted
assessments for high school courses. The
competition includes a competitive preference
priority for applications that include a high quality
plan to develop, with relevant business community
participation and support, assessments for high
school courses that comprise a rigorous course of
study in career and technical education that is
designed to prepare high school students for
success on technical certification examinations or
for postsecondary education or employment.
E:\FR\FM\27MYN1.SGM
27MYN1
wwoods2 on DSK1DXX6B1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 102 / Thursday, May 27, 2010 / Notices
missing components. We also would
require CTE staff from the funded States
to continue to work closely with the
participating LEAs throughout the
project period, and provide technical
assistance and support to ensure
constancy in the implementation of the
selected POS in the participating LEAs.
Evaluation. We propose to require
each State receiving a grant award under
this program to conduct an annual
evaluation of its project by evaluating
local implementation of the selected
POS and using student outcome data on
the performance measures listed
elsewhere in this notice to assess the
progress of students enrolled in the
selected POS. To ensure consistency
across the funded States in the use of
student outcome data, we propose to
require funded States to attend a Project
Evaluation Design meeting in
Washington, DC, following receipt of
their grant awards, to discuss and
possibly refine the grantee selfassessment tools related to the 10
Framework components that are
developed by the grantees, and to work
with OVAE and with each other to
develop a plan for the States’ use of
student outcome data to assess the
progress of students enrolled in the
selected POS.
Capacity of Statewide Longitudinal
Data System. Because we expect that the
primary focus of this program will be to
evaluate the progress of students
enrolled in a POS, we propose to limit
eligibility for awards to States whose
longitudinal data systems have the
capacity to link and share data among
systems housing different types of data.
The Department recognizes that States
are at different stages in developing
their capacities to link and share
necessary information among systems.
Nevertheless, we propose to fund only
States that have the capability of
collecting longitudinal data on a variety
of secondary, postsecondary, and
employment outcomes for individual
students so that we may assess the long
term outcomes of their participation in
a POS.
Dissemination. The Act requires all
States to offer POSs, which may be
adopted by LEAs and postsecondary
institutions as an option to students
(and their parents, as appropriate) when
they plan for and complete coursework
in career and technical content areas.
Each local recipient of funds under the
Act must offer at least one career and
technical POS. To assist all States and
local recipients in their efforts to
develop and implement rigorous POSs,
we propose to require States receiving
grant awards under this program to
conduct specific dissemination
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:26 May 26, 2010
Jkt 220001
activities during the grant period, such
as sharing project materials via each
State’s Web site and participating in
OVAE-sponsored POS meetings and
presentations.
Cooperative Agreement. We also plan
to make awards under the next POS
competition under the terms of a
cooperative agreement. In order to
ensure consistency in POS
implementation and evaluation across
the funded States, we believe it is
necessary for the Department to
maintain substantial involvement in the
implementation of POS projects funded
under the next POS program
competition and to provide close
Department oversight of POS project
activities. We believe that making these
awards through cooperative agreements
will facilitate that involvement and
oversight.
Proposed Requirements:
The Assistant Secretary proposes the
following requirements for this program.
We may apply one or more of these
requirements in any year in which this
program is in effect.
Selected Program of Study:
Applicants must propose a project to
implement a State-developed or Stateapproved POS that is built and
sustained with the following 10
Framework components:
(a) Legislation, Resources, and
Policies: State and local legislation,
resources, or administrative policies
that promote POS development and
implementation;
(b) Partnerships: Ongoing
relationships among education,
business, and other community
stakeholders that support POS design,
implementation, and maintenance;
(c) Professional Development:
Sustained, intensive, and focused
professional development opportunities
for administrators, teachers, and faculty
that foster POS design, implementation,
and maintenance;
(d) Accountability and Evaluation
Systems: Accountability and evaluation
systems and strategies that gather
quantitative and qualitative data on both
POS components and student outcomes
in order to inform ongoing efforts to
develop and implement POSs and to
determine their effectiveness;
(e) College and Career Readiness
Standards: POS content standards that
define what students are expected to
know and be able to do to enter and
advance in college, their careers, or
both, and that include aligned academic
and technical content;
(f) Course Sequences of Secondary
and Postsecondary Courses: Course
sequences within a POS that help
students transition to postsecondary
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
29735
education without needing to duplicate
classes or enroll in remedial courses.
(g) Credit Transfer Agreements:
Formal credit transfer agreements
among secondary schools and
postsecondary institutions;
(h) Comprehensive Guidance
Counseling and Academic Advisory
Systems: Systems that provide career
counseling and academic advisory
services to help students make informed
decisions about which POS to pursue;
(i) Teaching and Learning Strategies:
Innovative and creative instructional
approaches that enable teachers to
integrate academic and technical
instruction and also enable students to
apply academic and technical learning
in their POS coursework; and
(j) Technical Skills Assessments:
Existing valid and reliable technical
skills assessments that provide ongoing
information on the extent to which
students are attaining the necessary
knowledge and skills for entry into and
advancement in postsecondary
education and careers in their chosen
POS.
Each of these 10 components of the
Framework has unique sub-components.
The sub-components for each of the 10
components are in the Proposed
Selection Criteria in this notice, under
proposed paragraph (a)(3), State
capacity to implement a rigorous
program of study. Each State and its
participating LEAs must use all the subcomponents of the 10 Framework
components that the State deems
relevant to the selected POS and must
explain how it plans to support the
selected POS utilizing the relevant
subcomponents.
Existing Technical Skills
Assessments: Applicants must propose
a project to implement a Statedeveloped or State-approved POS for
which valid and reliable technical skills
assessments (either third-party industryrecognized assessments, or Statedeveloped or State-approved technical
skills assessments based on industry
standards that grant high school or
postsecondary credit, or both) have been
developed.
Local Implementation: Applicants
must propose a project to implement the
selected POS in at least three LEAs that
contain high schools, in concert with
each LEA’s postsecondary partners. If a
participating LEA contains more than
one high school, the LEA must
implement the selected POS in at least
one of its high schools. To the extent
feasible, participating LEAs must
implement the POS in at least one
urban, one suburban, and one rural
community. To be eligible for funding
an applicant will be required to
E:\FR\FM\27MYN1.SGM
27MYN1
wwoods2 on DSK1DXX6B1PROD with NOTICES
29736
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 102 / Thursday, May 27, 2010 / Notices
demonstrate that the LEAs chosen for
participation in the POS project have
the capacity to have all 10 Framework
components in place by the beginning of
year 2 of the project. The applicant must
include a letter of commitment from
each LEA, expressing its interest in
participating in the project and its
commitment to implement the selected
POS as prescribed by the State in years
2 through 4 of the grant and to maintain
constancy in the implementation of the
selected POS. During year 1 of the grant,
CTE staff from the funded States must
provide technical assistance to their
participating LEAs in order to
strengthen weak components or
incorporate missing components, so that
all 10 components are in place to
support the POS when it is
implemented at the LEA level. The
participating LEAs must implement the
selected POS during years 2 through 4
of the grant, beginning at the start of the
academic year corresponding to year 2
of the grant. The applicant must include
a plan that describes how CTE State
staff will continue to work closely with
the LEAs throughout the project period,
and provide technical assistance and
support to ensure constancy in the
implementation of the selected POS in
the participating LEAs.
Evaluation: Applicants must propose
to conduct an annual evaluation of the
project to assess the constancy of the
implementation of the selected POS in
the participating LEAs and the
effectiveness of each of the 10
components. To ensure consistency of
implementation across the selected
LEAs, CTE staff from the funded States
must use a self-assessment instrument
based on the 10 components as part of
its project evaluation.
Applicants must also use student
outcome data to assess the progress of
students enrolled in the selected POS.
To ensure consistency across the funded
States, State staff must attend a POS
Evaluation Design meeting in
Washington, DC, following the receipt
of the grant award, to discuss and
possibly refine the grantee selfassessment tools related to the 10
Framework components that are
developed by the grantees, and to work
with OVAE and with each other to
develop a plan for the States’ use of
student outcome data to assess the
progress of students enrolled in the
selected POS. This meeting will address
evaluation and data collection issues,
such as student definitions, the number
and method of selection of students to
be followed, strategies for comparing
outcomes for students who participate
in the POS to other students who do
not, the identification of potential
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:26 May 26, 2010
Jkt 220001
comparison groups through the States’
longitudinal data systems, and timing of
reporting. After the meeting, we will
include the agreed-upon plan for the
States’ use of the student outcome data
as an addendum to each grantee’s
cooperative agreement.
The State must also collect and report
data annually on the following
performance measures, which are based
on the indicators of performance
required under section 113(b) (State
Performance Measures) and section
203(e) (Tech Prep Indicators of
Performance and Accountability) of the
Act:
(a) Secondary school completion. The
percentage of secondary students
participating in the POS supported by
the grant award who earn a high school
diploma.
(b) Technical skills attainment. The
percentage of secondary students
participating in the POS supported by
the grant award who attain technical
skills.
(c) Earned postsecondary credit
during high school. The percentage of
secondary students participating in the
POS supported by the grant award who
earn postsecondary credit.
(d) Enrollment in postsecondary
education. The percentage of secondary
students participating in the POS
supported by the grant award who
enroll in postsecondary education by
the fall following high school
graduation.
(e) Enrollment in postsecondary
education in a field or major related to
the secondary POS. The percentage of
secondary students participating in the
POS supported by the grant award who
enroll in a postsecondary education
program in a field or major related to the
participant’s secondary POS.
(f) Need for developmental course
work in postsecondary education. The
percentage of secondary students
participating in the POS supported by
the grant award who enroll in one or
more postsecondary education
developmental courses.
(g) Postsecondary credential,
certificate, or diploma attainment. The
percentage of secondary students
participating in the POS supported by
the grant award who attain an industryrecognized credential, certificate, or
associate’s degree, within two years
following enrollment in postsecondary
education.
Capacity of Statewide Longitudinal
Data System: Applicants must propose
the use of a longitudinal data system
that has the capacity to link and share
data among systems housing different
types of data. The longitudinal data
system must contain, at a minimum, the
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
elements listed below. These elements
are consistent with section 6401(e)(2)(D)
of the America Competes Act (Pub. L.
110–69):
(a) Statewide unique student
identifiers;
(b) Student-level enrollment data;
(c) Student-level course completion
(transcript) data;
(d) The ability to match student-level
secondary and postsecondary data;
(e) The ability to link student-level
data to employment outcome data, such
as Unemployment Insurance (UI) wage
records; and
(f) A State data audit plan to verify
that the education data are valid and
reliable.
Applicants also must ensure (and
include an assurance in their
applications) that their use of data will
be consistent with the requirements and
protections contained in the Family
Educational Rights and Privacy Act
(FERPA).
Dissemination: Applicants must
propose to implement a dissemination
plan for the project. The plan must
include the development and
maintenance of a project Web page for
posting project materials, such as:
Materials describing the State’s process
for approving POSs submitted by local
recipients of funds; curricula developed
for the selected POS; technical
assistance materials provided to the
participating LEAs and to other local
recipients of funds, if applicable;
professional development materials;
materials describing evaluation results,
including performance data on the
required performance measures based
on the indicators of performance; and
other materials containing practical
information that would be useful to
other States in their efforts to implement
and evaluate POSs. Applicants must
also participate in POS activities
sponsored by the Department, such as
annual POS grantee meetings in which
grantees describe the progress of their
projects and discuss common issues,
strategies, and models of best practices;
OVAE/POS grantee presentations at the
States’ Annual National Career Clusters
Institutes; OVAE/POS grantee
presentations at annual NASDCTEc
meetings; and presentations at OVAEsponsored data quality meetings.
Cooperative Agreement: We plan to
make each award to grantees under this
program under the terms of a
cooperative agreement. We expect to
work closely with the funded States to
maintain substantial involvement in
project implementation, and to provide
oversight on project activities by
working collaboratively to develop a
E:\FR\FM\27MYN1.SGM
27MYN1
wwoods2 on DSK1DXX6B1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 102 / Thursday, May 27, 2010 / Notices
plan for the use of student outcome
data, reviewing and approving project
activities, reviewing and approving one
stage of work before the grantee can
begin a subsequent stage during the
project period, and halting an activity if
it is not consistent with the program
requirements.
Proposed Selection Criteria:
Background:
The first competition under the POS
program was held in 2008. Since then,
we have gained a better understanding
of the level and complexity of the work
required for effective POS
implementation and of the program
components that are necessary to
implement rigorous POSs. The selection
criteria proposed in this notice
emphasize the implementation of POSs
that are built and sustained with the 10
specific Framework components and the
collection of valid and reliable
longitudinal data, to ensure consistency
across funded projects in the
implementation and evaluation of POSs.
Proposed Selection Criteria:
The Assistant Secretary proposes the
following selection criteria for
evaluating an application under a POS
competition. We may apply one or more
of these criteria in any year in which we
hold a competition under this program.
In a notice inviting applications, in the
application package, or in both, we will
announce the maximum possible points
assigned to each criterion.
(a) State capacity to implement a
rigorous program of study: In
determining the applicant’s capacity to
implement a rigorous POS, we review
each application to determine the extent
to which:
(1) The applicant proposes to build on
existing State initiatives and
partnerships in implementing the
proposed project.
(2) The applicant selects a POS that
will provide training leading to highgrowth, high-demand, or high-wage
occupations as determined through
analysis of the national, State, or local
labor market.
(3) The applicant provides evidence
that it has selected a State-developed or
State-approved POS that is built and
sustained with the following 10
Framework components; that it has
identified which of the sub-components
from among those listed under each
component are relevant to the selected
POS; and that it plans to use those
relevant sub-components in its POS and
explains how it proposes to do so.
(i) State and local legislation,
resources, or administrative policies
that promote POS development and
implementation, such as—
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:26 May 26, 2010
Jkt 220001
(A) The allocation of State or local
funding (and other non-Federal
resources) designed to promote POS
development and long-term
sustainability;
(B) The use of established, formal
procedures for the design,
implementation, and continuous
improvement of POSs;
(C) Adherence to policies that ensure
opportunities for any interested
secondary student to participate in a
POS; and
(D) The use of individual graduation
or career plans for participating
students.
(ii) Ongoing relationships among
education, business, and other
community stakeholders that support
POS design, implementation, and
maintenance, such as by—
(A) Using written memoranda that
specify the roles and responsibilities of
partnership members;
(B) Conducting ongoing analyses of
economic and workforce trends to
identify POSs that should be created,
expanded, or, if appropriate,
discontinued;
(C) Linking POS development to
existing initiatives that promote
workforce and economic development;
and
(D) Identifying, validating, and
updating technical and workforce
readiness skills to be taught within
POSs.
(iii) Sustained, intensive, and focused
professional development opportunities
for administrators, teachers, and faculty
that foster POS design, implementation,
and maintenance, and that—
(A) Support the alignment of
academic and technical curriculum
within the POS from grade to grade
(within grades 9 through 12) and from
secondary to postsecondary education;
(B) Support the development of
integrated academic and CTE
curriculum and instruction within the
POS;
(C) Ensure that teachers and faculty
have the necessary content knowledge
to align and integrate curriculum and
instruction within the POS; and
(D) Foster innovative teaching and
learning strategies within the POS.
(iv) Accountability and evaluation
systems and strategies that gather
quantitative and qualitative data on both
POS components and student outcomes
to inform ongoing efforts to develop and
implement POSs and to determine their
effectiveness, and that—
(A) Yield valid and reliable data on
key student outcomes (indicators of
performance) referenced in the Act and
other relevant Federal and State
legislation; and
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
29737
(B) Provide timely data to inform
ongoing efforts to develop, implement,
evaluate, and improve the effectiveness
of POSs.
(v) POS content standards that define
what students are expected to know and
be able to do to enter and advance in
college, their careers, or both, and that
include aligned academic and technical
content, and that—
(A) Are developed and continually
validated in collaboration with
secondary, postsecondary, and industry
partners;
(B) Incorporate essential knowledge
and skills that students must master
regardless of their chosen career area or
POS;
(C) Provide the same rigorous
knowledge and skills in Englishlanguage arts and mathematics that
employers and colleges expect of high
school graduates; and
(D) To the extent practicable, are
internationally benchmarked so that
students are prepared to succeed in a
global economy.
(vi) Course sequences within a POS
that help ensure students’ transition to
postsecondary education without
needing to duplicate classes or enroll in
remedial courses, as evidenced by—
(A) Course sequence plans that map
out recommended academic and career
and technical courses for the POS;
(B) Course sequence plans that begin
with introductory courses at the
secondary level by teaching broad
foundational knowledge and skills
common across all POSs and then
progress to more occupationally specific
courses at the postsecondary level that
provide the knowledge and skills
required for entry into and advancement
in the selected POS; and
(C) Opportunities for students to earn
postsecondary credit for coursework
taken during high school.
(vii) Formal credit transfer agreements
among secondary schools and
postsecondary institutions that—
(A) Provide a systematic, seamless
process for students to earn college
credit for postsecondary courses taken
in high school, transfer high school
credit to any two- or four-year
institution in the State that offers the
POS, and transfer credit earned at a twoyear college to any other two- or fouryear institution in the State that offers
the POS;
(B) Record college credit earned by
high school students on their high
school transcripts at the time the credit
is earned so that they can transfer
seamlessly into the college portion of
the POS without the need for additional
paperwork or petitioning for credit; and
E:\FR\FM\27MYN1.SGM
27MYN1
wwoods2 on DSK1DXX6B1PROD with NOTICES
29738
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 102 / Thursday, May 27, 2010 / Notices
(C) Describe the expectations and
requirements for teacher and faculty
qualifications, course prerequisites,
postsecondary entry requirements,
location of courses, tuition
reimbursement, and the credit transfer
process.
(viii) Comprehensive guidance
counseling and academic advisory
systems that provide career counseling
and academic advisory services to help
students make informed decisions about
which POS to pursue and that—
(A) Are based on State or local
guidance and counseling standards,
such as the National Career
Development Guidelines;
(B) Ensure that guidance counselors
and academic advisors have access to
up-to-date information about POS
offerings to aid students in their
decision-making;
(C) Offer information and tools to help
students learn about postsecondary
education and career options, including
about the prerequisites for particular
POSs;
(D) Provide resources for students to
identify career interests and aptitudes
and to select an appropriate POS;
(E) Provide information and resources
for parents, including workshops on
college and financial aid applications,
on helping their children prepare for
college and careers; and
(F) Provide Web-based resources and
tools for obtaining student financial
assistance.
(ix) Innovative and creative
instructional approaches that enable
teachers to integrate academic and
technical instruction and students to
apply academic and technical learning
in their POS coursework, as evidenced
by—
(A) Interdisciplinary teaching teams
of academic and career and technical
secondary teachers or postsecondary
faculty;
(B) The use of contextualized workbased, project-based, and problem-based
learning approaches; and
(C) The use of teaching strategies that
foster team-building, critical thinking,
problem-solving, and communication
skills.
(x) Existing Valid and reliable
technical skills assessments that provide
ongoing information on the extent to
which students are attaining the
necessary knowledge and skills for entry
into and advancement in postsecondary
education and careers in their chosen
POS and that—
(A) Are either third-party assessments
recognized by industry or are technical
skills assessments developed or
approved by the State that are based on
industry standards;
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:26 May 26, 2010
Jkt 220001
(B) Measure student attainment of
technical skill proficiencies at multiple
points during a POS;
(C) Incorporate, to the greatest extent
possible, performance-based assessment
items through which students must
demonstrate the application of their
knowledge and skills; and
(D) Result in the awarding of
secondary credit, postsecondary credit,
or special designation on a student’s
high school diploma.
(b) Capacity of the State’s
longitudinal data system: In
determining the State’s capacity to
collect longitudinal data on a variety of
secondary, postsecondary, and
employment outcomes for individual
students in order to assess the progress
of students enrolled in the selected POS,
we review each application to
determine the extent to which:
(1) The State’s longitudinal data
system contains, at a minimum, the
following elements—
(i) Statewide unique student
identifiers;
(ii) Student-level enrollment data;
(iii) Student-level course completion
(transcript) data;
(iv) The ability to match student-level
secondary and postsecondary data;
(v) The ability to link student-level
data with employment outcome data,
such as Unemployment Insurance (UI)
wage records; and
(vi) A State data audit plan to verify
that the education data are valid and
reliable.
(2) The applicant provides evidence
that project staff from the funded States
will be able to work cooperatively with
State data specialists and to access the
student outcome data needed to meet
annual evaluation and reporting
requirements for the POS project.
(c) Local implementation plan:
In determining the quality of the plan
for local implementation of the selected
POS, we review each application to
determine the extent to which—
(1) The applicant identifies each of
the LEAs it has selected for local
implementation of the POS and
provides evidence of each LEA’s
capacity to implement the selected POS
and the 10 components, as well as the
estimated number of students who
would participate in the POS in years 2
through 4 of the grant, by grade level.
(2) The participating LEAs represent
urban, suburban, and rural
communities; and
(3) The applicant includes a letter of
commitment from each LEA, expressing
its interest in participating in the project
and its commitment to implementing
the selected POS as prescribed by the
State in years 2 through 4 of the grant
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
and to maintain constancy in the
implementation of the selected POS.
(4) In the case of LEAs that do not
have all 10 components in place at the
start of the project, the applicant
outlines the specific actions it will take
to ensure that weak or missing
components are strengthened or created
so that all 10 components are in place
and the LEA is ready to implement the
POS by the beginning of the academic
year corresponding to year 2 of the
grant.
(5) The applicant outlines a plan to
provide ongoing oversight and technical
assistance to the participating LEAs
throughout the project period, to ensure
constancy in the implementation of the
selected POS across the participating
LEAs.
(d) Project management. In
determining the quality of the
management plan for the proposed
project, we review each application to
determine the extent to which—
(1) The management plan
incorporates, at a minimum, each of the
proposed requirements included in this
notice, and identifies specific and
measurable objectives and tasks to be
undertaken to accomplish each project
activity;
(2) The management plan assigns
responsibility for the accomplishment of
project tasks to specific partners or
project personnel and provides
timelines that will result in the timely
completion of all required project
activities within each phase of the
project;
(3) The Project Director and other key
personnel clearly have the professional
qualifications and experience necessary
to implement their assigned project
tasks; and
(4) The time commitments of the
Project Director, key personnel, and
partners are appropriate to the tasks
assigned.
(e) Adequacy of resources. In
determining the adequacy of resources
for the proposed project, we consider
the following factors:
(1) The adequacy of support to be
provided (i.e., facilities, equipment,
supplies, or other resources) by
participating agencies and institutions
at the State and local levels.
(2) Whether the budget is appropriate
and the costs are reasonable in relation
to the objectives and design of the
proposed project.
(f) Evaluation: In determining the
quality of the proposed project
evaluation, we review each application
to determine the extent to which—
(1) The proposed project evaluation is
feasible and appropriate for evaluating
the constancy of the implementation of
E:\FR\FM\27MYN1.SGM
27MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 102 / Thursday, May 27, 2010 / Notices
the selected POS by the participating
LEAs in years 2 through 4 of the grant.
(2) The proposed evaluation is
feasible and appropriate for evaluating
the effectiveness of each of the 10
components in each LEA.
(3) The proposed evaluation will be
conducted by individuals or entities
that possess the necessary background
and expertise in project evaluation.
(4) The applicant expresses its
commitment to participate in the
Department’s Evaluation Design
Meeting and has included suggestions
regarding the use of student outcome
data that it could access through the
State’s longitudinal data system to
assess the progress of students enrolled
in the POS.
We will announce the final priorities,
requirements, and selection criteria in a
notice in the Federal Register. We will
determine the final priorities,
requirements, and selection criteria after
considering responses to this notice and
other information available to the
Department. This notice does not
preclude us from proposing additional
priorities, requirements, definitions, or
selection criteria, subject to meeting
applicable rulemaking requirements.
wwoods2 on DSK1DXX6B1PROD with NOTICES
Note: This notice does not solicit
applications. In any year in which we choose
to use one or more of these priorities,
requirements, and selection criteria, we
invite applications through a notice in the
Federal Register.
Executive Order 12866: This notice
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
proposed regulatory action.
The potential costs associated with
this proposed regulatory action are
those resulting from statutory
requirements and those we have
determined as necessary for
administering this program effectively
and efficiently.
In assessing the potential costs and
benefits—both quantitative and
qualitative—of this proposed regulatory
action, we have determined that the
benefits of the proposed priorities,
requirements, and selection criteria
justify the costs. This action would
provide additional resources to States to
help them implement an existing
statutory requirement under the Act, the
implementation of programs of study at
the State and local levels.
We have determined, also, that this
proposed regulatory action does not
unduly interfere with State, local, and
tribal governments in the exercise of
their governmental functions.
Intergovernmental Review: This
program is subject to Executive Order
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:26 May 26, 2010
Jkt 220001
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 this program.
Accessible Format: Individuals with
disabilities can obtain this document in
an accessible format (e.g., Braille, large
print, audiotape, or computer diskette)
on request to the program contact
person listed under FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT.
Electronic Access to This Document:
You can view this document, as well as
all other documents of this Department
published in the Federal Register, in
text or Adobe Portable Document
Format (PDF) on the Internet at the
following site: https://www.ed.gov/news/
fedregister. To use PDF you must have
Adobe Acrobat Reader, which is
available free at this site.
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.
Brenda Dann-Messier,
Assistant Secretary for Vocational and Adult
Education.
[FR Doc. 2010–12802 Filed 5–26–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Advisory Committee on Student
Financial Assistance: Hearing
AGENCY: Advisory Committee on
Student Financial Assistance,
Education.
ACTION:
Notice of a public hearing.
SUMMARY: This notice sets forth the
schedule and proposed agenda of a
forthcoming hearing of the Advisory
Committee on Student Financial
Assistance (The Advisory Committee).
This notice also describes the functions
of the Advisory Committee. Notice of
this hearing is required under Section
10(a)(2) of the Federal Advisory
Committee Act. This document is
intended to notify the general public.
DATE AND TIME: Friday, June 25, 2010,
beginning at 9 a.m. and ending at
approximately 5 p.m.
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
29739
ADDRESSES: Washington Court Hotel,
Grand Ballroom, 525 New Jersey
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20001.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Ms. Megan McClean, Director of
Government Relations, Advisory
Committee on Student Financial
Assistance, Capitol Place, 80 F Street,
NW., Suite 413, Washington, DC 20202–
7582, (202) 219–2099.
Individuals who use a
telecommunications device for the deaf
(TDD) may call the Federal Information
Relay Service (FRS) at 1–800–877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Advisory Committee on Student
Financial Assistance is established
under Section 491 of the Higher
Education Act of 1965 as amended by
Public Law 100–50 (20 U.S.C. 1098).
The Advisory Committee serves as an
independent source of advice and
counsel to the Congress and the
Secretary of Education on student
financial aid policy. Since its inception,
the congressional mandate requires the
Advisory Committee to conduct
objective, nonpartisan, and independent
analyses on important aspects of the
student assistance programs under Title
IV of the Higher Education Act, and to
make recommendations that will result
in the maintenance of access to
postsecondary education for low- and
middle-income students. In addition,
Congress expanded the Advisory
Committee’s mission in the Higher
Education Amendments of 1998 to
include several important areas: Access,
Title IV modernization, distance
education, and early information and
needs assessment. Specifically, the
Advisory Committee is to review,
monitor and evaluate the Department of
Education’s progress in these areas and
report recommended improvements to
Congress and the Secretary.
The Advisory Committee has
scheduled this one-day hearing to
discuss the Advisory Committee’s latest
report, The Rising Price of Inequality:
How Inadequate Need-Based Grant Aid
Limits College Access and Persistence
and also the Higher Education
Regulation Study.
Individuals who will need
accommodations for a disability in order
to attend the Hearing (i.e., interpreting
services, assistive listening devices,
and/or materials in alternative format)
should notify the Advisory Committee
no later than Friday, June 11, 2010 by
contacting Ms. Tracy Jones at (202) 219–
2099 or via e-mail at
tracy.deanna.jones@ed.gov. We will
attempt to meet requests after this date,
but cannot guarantee availability of the
requested accommodation. The hearing
E:\FR\FM\27MYN1.SGM
27MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 102 (Thursday, May 27, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 29732-29739]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-12802]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Career and Technical Education Program--Promoting Rigorous Career
and Technical Education Programs of Study
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) Number: 84.051C.
AGENCY: Office of Vocational and Adult Education, Department of
Education.
ACTION: Notice of proposed priorities, requirements, and selection
criteria.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Assistant Secretary for Vocational and Adult Education
proposes priorities, requirements, and selection criteria for a program
promoting rigorous career and technical education programs of study
(POSs) through the use of ten key components based on the ``Program of
Study Design Framework'' (Framework). We take this action to promote
and improve State and local development and implementation of career
and technical education (CTE) POSs that link secondary and
postsecondary education, combine academic and career and technical
education in a structured sequence of courses that progress from broad
foundation skills to more occupationally specific courses (e.g., the
States' Career Clusters, initially funded and launched by the
Department (see https://www.careerclusters.org/index.php), and offer
students the opportunities to earn postsecondary credits for courses
taken in high school that lead to a postsecondary credential,
certificate, or degree.
DATES: We must receive your comments on or before June 28, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Submit all comments about this notice to Laura Messenger,
U.S. Department of Education, 400 Maryland Avenue, SW., room 11028,
Potomac Center Plaza, Washington, DC 20202-7241.
If you prefer to send your comments by e-mail, use the following
address: laura.messenger@ed.gov. You must include the term ``POS
Notice'' in the subject line of your electronic message.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Laura Messenger. Telephone: 202-245-
7840 or by e-mail: laura.messenger@ed.gov.
If you use a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD), call the
Federal Relay Service (FRS), toll free, at 1-800-877-8339.
[[Page 29733]]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Invitation to Comment: We invite you to submit comments regarding
this notice. To ensure that your comments have maximum effect in
developing the notice of final priorities, requirements, and selection
criteria, we urge you to identify clearly the specific proposed
priority, requirement, or selection criterion that each comment
addresses.
The Assistant Secretary is also particularly interested in
receiving comments on the Program of Study (POS) Design Framework set
forth in this notice. The Framework is available on the Department's
Perkins Collaborative Resource Network (PCRN) Web site at: https://cte.ed.gov/nationalinitiatives/rposdesignframework.cfm. The Assistant
Secretary also seeks comment on the status of a State's capacity and
plan to collect employment data as part of a longitudinal data system
linked to a State's educational data system.
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, requirements, and selection criteria. Please let us know of
any further ways we could reduce potential costs or increase potential
benefits while preserving the effective and efficient administration of
the program.
During and after the comment period, you may inspect all public
comments about this notice in room 11028, 550 12th Street, SW.,
Washington, DC, between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.,
Washington, DC time, Monday through Friday of each week except Federal
holidays.
Assistance to Individuals with Disabilities in Reviewing the
Rulemaking Record: On request, we will provide an appropriate
accommodation or auxiliary aid to an individual with a disability who
needs assistance to review the comments or other documents in the
public rulemaking record for this notice. If you want to schedule an
appointment for this type of accommodation or auxiliary aid, please
contact the person listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
Purpose of Program: The Promoting Rigorous Career and Technical
Education Programs of Study program is authorized under section
114(c)(1) of the Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act of
2006 (Act). Under this section, the Secretary is authorized to carry
out research, development, dissemination, evaluation and assessment,
capacity building, and technical assistance with regard to CTE programs
under the Act. Through this program, we intend to promote and improve
State and local development and implementation of CTE POSs that link
secondary and postsecondary education, combine academic and career and
technical education in a structured sequence of courses that progress
from broad foundation skills to more occupationally specific courses,
offer students the opportunities to earn postsecondary credits for
courses taken in high school, and lead to a postsecondary credential,
certificate, or degree.
General Background:
To help States and local agencies meet the requirements of section
122(c)(1)(A) of the Act to provide career and technical programs of
study, we held the first competition, entitled ``Promoting Rigorous
Career and Technical Education Programs of Study through Statewide or
Multi-State Articulation Agreements'' for this program in 2008. The
proposals in this notice are informed by our experience with that
competition and administering the six grants that were funded through
that competition.
Subsequent to the 2008 competition, in early 2009 and in response
to requests for assistance in developing and implementing POSs from
State and local program administrators and national technical
assistance providers, OVAE reviewed extant literature and case study
research and developed a draft POS Design Framework. The draft
Framework identified 10 components that, taken together, would support
the development and implementation of rigorous and effective POSs. On
June 11, 2009, the Office of Vocational and Adult Education (OVAE)
convened a meeting of leading POS experts to gather feedback and input
on the draft Framework. The experts included representatives from
organizations such as the Association for Career and Technical
Education, the National Association of State Directors of Career and
Technical Education Consortium (NASDCTEc), the National Governors
Association, the National Research Center for Career and Technical
Education (NRCCTE), the Academy for Educational Development (AED), the
National Career Pathways Network, the League for Innovation in the
Community College, and MPR Associates, Inc.
At the meeting, participants agreed to work collaboratively with
OVAE to complete a final version of the Framework and disseminate it
for use by their organizations and by others engaged in POS development
and implementation. In collaboration with major national associations
and organizations, OVAE completed the Framework in January 2010.
NASDCTEc, NRCCTE, AED, and MPR Associates, Inc. are currently using it
to provide technical assistance to their POS projects with States and
localities. Most of the proposed priorities, requirements, and
selection criteria in this notice are based on the Framework.
Some of the proposals in this notice are consistent with three of
the four areas the Secretary has identified as key for educational
reform. The proposed requirement that States and localities adopt
rigorous college and career readiness standards that define what
students are expected to know and be able to do to enter and advance in
college, their careers, or both, is consistent with the Secretary's
goals in the area of standards and assessments. The proposed
requirement for innovative and creative instructional approaches that
enable teachers to integrate academic and technical instruction is
consistent with the Secretary's goals for teacher effectiveness, as is
the proposed requirement that projects provide sustained, intensive,
and focused professional development opportunities so as to ensure that
teachers have the necessary content knowledge to align and integrate
curriculum and instruction. The proposed requirement that States and
localities use well-designed State longitudinal data systems that yield
valid and reliable data on a variety of secondary, postsecondary, and
employment outcomes for individual students is consistent with the
Secretary's goals for improving the capacity of Statewide longitudinal
data systems.
The Assistant Secretary plans to make awards under the next POS
competition for a 4-year project period.
Program Authority: 20 U.S.C. 2324(c)(1).
Proposed Priorities:
Types of Priorities:
When inviting applications for a competition using one or more
priorities, we designate the type of each priority as absolute,
competitive preference, or invitational through a notice in the Federal
Register. 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 (1)
awarding additional points, depending on the extent to which the
application meets the priority
[[Page 29734]]
(34 CFR 75.105(c)(2)(i)); or (2) selecting an application that meets
the 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 priority.
However, we do not give an application that meets the priority
preference over other applications (34 CFR 75.105(c)(1)).
This notice contains one proposed priority.
Proposed Competitive Preference Priority--Commitment to the Project
Background:
Section 122(c)(1) of the Act requires States to offer CTE POSs,
which may be adopted by local educational agencies (LEAs) and
postsecondary institutions as an option to students (and their parents,
as appropriate), when planning for and completing coursework for career
and technical content areas. Under section 134(b)(3)(A) of the Act,
each local recipient of funds must offer the appropriate courses of not
less than one career and technical program of study described in
section 122(c)(1)(A). To align project activities with a State's
ongoing POS efforts and to demonstrate a State's commitment of staff
and other resources to fully executing the goals of the proposed
project, the Assistant Secretary is proposing a priority for
applications that propose to contribute funds from other sources of
funds to the total cost of the project.
Proposed Competitive Preference Priority:
To meet this priority, the applicant must propose a budget that
describes how the State will contribute 30 percent of the total cost of
the project. For these purposes, the applicant may use--
(a) State leadership funds awarded under section 111 of the Act and
as specified in section 112(a)(1) of the Act;
(b) Non-Federal contributions including in-kind contributions such
as use of facilities, equipment, supplies, services, and other
resources; or
(c) A combination of State leadership funds and non-Federal
contributions.
Proposed Requirements:
Background:
Selected Program of Study. Since the Act was reauthorized in 2006,
States and local recipients have worked to meet the POS requirements of
section 122(c)(1) of the Act. We believe that the development of the
Framework will provide significant support for those efforts. The
Framework reflects the collective thinking of the Department and the
primary organizations and associations engaged in POS development over
the past several years, and identifies 10 components that support the
development and implementation of rigorous and effective POSs. To date,
POSs have differed widely from State to State. POSs may also differ
widely from school district to school district within a State, as well
as from school to school within a district. To ensure the rigor of
funded POSs and consistency in their design and implementation, we
propose to require States receiving grant awards under this program to
implement a POS that is built and sustained with the 10 specific
components in the Framework.
We note that in the 2008 competition, we provided funding to help
States use statewide articulation agreements between secondary
education and postsecondary institutions as a primary strategy for
implementing POSs. In the proposed Selected Program of Study
requirement, we refer to the statewide articulation agreements as
``Credit Transfer Agreements'' and the use of such agreements is one of
the 10 components in the Framework. As proposed, credit transfer
agreements would support the proper alignment of standards, curriculum,
and instruction across educational levels and promote, to the extent
possible, the awarding of postsecondary credit for courses taken during
high school.
The 2008 competition also emphasized the creation of partnerships
to ensure the rigor and quality of POSs. Through the experience gained
from the work of the six projects funded under the 2008 competition,
the POS efforts underway in other States, and the experience of leading
POS experts, we have gained a better understanding of the level and
complexity of the work required for effective POS implementation and of
the program components that are necessary for the development and
implementation of rigorous POSs. Accordingly, the Framework includes,
and we are proposing in this requirement that States create,
partnerships with education, business, and other key stakeholders.
Existing Technical Skills Assessments. States currently report on
the technical skill attainment of CTE students at the secondary and
postsecondary levels. In some cases, States are using third-party
industry-recognized assessments to determine technical skill
attainment. Where such assessments are not available, particularly at
the secondary level, States have sought to develop their own
assessments. When the assessments are based on industry standards, they
may result in the granting of high school credit. When the assessments
are based on industry standards and developed through collaboration
between secondary and postsecondary institutions, they may result in
the granting of postsecondary credit for high school students.
The Department recognizes that assessment development can be both
costly and time-consuming.\1\ As a result, given the limited funding
available under this program and our intent to evaluate the progress of
students enrolled in a POS, we propose to require States receiving
grant awards under this program to implement a POS for which valid and
reliable technical skills assessments (either industry-recognized
assessments or State-developed or State-approved assessments based on
industry standards that grant high school or postsecondary credit, or
both) have been developed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ For example, the Department recently announced, as part of
its Race to the Top Assessment program, a High School Course
Assessment program that will support consortia of States in the
development of new or adapted assessments for high school courses.
The competition includes a competitive preference priority for
applications that include a high quality plan to develop, with
relevant business community participation and support, assessments
for high school courses that comprise a rigorous course of study in
career and technical education that is designed to prepare high
school students for success on technical certification examinations
or for postsecondary education or employment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Local Implementation. We also propose to require funded States to
implement the selected POS in at least three LEAs that contain high
schools, in concert with their postsecondary partners, beginning no
later than the start of the academic year corresponding to year 2 of
the grant. The applicant must include a letter of commitment from each
LEA, expressing its interest in participating in the project and its
commitment to implement the selected POS as prescribed by the State in
years 2 through 4 of the grant. If an LEA contains more than one high
school, it would be required to implement the selected POS in at least
one of its high schools. To the extent feasible, the LEAs must
implement the POS in at least one urban, one suburban, and one rural
community. If an LEA currently does not have all 10 components in
place, the State applicant must provide an assurance that each
participating LEA will have all 10 components in place to support the
selected POS when it is implemented in year 2. To achieve this end, we
are proposing to require that CTE staff from the funded States provide
technical assistance to the participating LEAs during the first year of
the project in order to strengthen weak components or incorporate
[[Page 29735]]
missing components. We also would require CTE staff from the funded
States to continue to work closely with the participating LEAs
throughout the project period, and provide technical assistance and
support to ensure constancy in the implementation of the selected POS
in the participating LEAs.
Evaluation. We propose to require each State receiving a grant
award under this program to conduct an annual evaluation of its project
by evaluating local implementation of the selected POS and using
student outcome data on the performance measures listed elsewhere in
this notice to assess the progress of students enrolled in the selected
POS. To ensure consistency across the funded States in the use of
student outcome data, we propose to require funded States to attend a
Project Evaluation Design meeting in Washington, DC, following receipt
of their grant awards, to discuss and possibly refine the grantee self-
assessment tools related to the 10 Framework components that are
developed by the grantees, and to work with OVAE and with each other to
develop a plan for the States' use of student outcome data to assess
the progress of students enrolled in the selected POS.
Capacity of Statewide Longitudinal Data System. Because we expect
that the primary focus of this program will be to evaluate the progress
of students enrolled in a POS, we propose to limit eligibility for
awards to States whose longitudinal data systems have the capacity to
link and share data among systems housing different types of data. The
Department recognizes that States are at different stages in developing
their capacities to link and share necessary information among systems.
Nevertheless, we propose to fund only States that have the capability
of collecting longitudinal data on a variety of secondary,
postsecondary, and employment outcomes for individual students so that
we may assess the long term outcomes of their participation in a POS.
Dissemination. The Act requires all States to offer POSs, which may
be adopted by LEAs and postsecondary institutions as an option to
students (and their parents, as appropriate) when they plan for and
complete coursework in career and technical content areas. Each local
recipient of funds under the Act must offer at least one career and
technical POS. To assist all States and local recipients in their
efforts to develop and implement rigorous POSs, we propose to require
States receiving grant awards under this program to conduct specific
dissemination activities during the grant period, such as sharing
project materials via each State's Web site and participating in OVAE-
sponsored POS meetings and presentations.
Cooperative Agreement. We also plan to make awards under the next
POS competition under the terms of a cooperative agreement. In order to
ensure consistency in POS implementation and evaluation across the
funded States, we believe it is necessary for the Department to
maintain substantial involvement in the implementation of POS projects
funded under the next POS program competition and to provide close
Department oversight of POS project activities. We believe that making
these awards through cooperative agreements will facilitate that
involvement and oversight.
Proposed Requirements:
The Assistant Secretary proposes the following requirements for
this program. We may apply one or more of these requirements in any
year in which this program is in effect.
Selected Program of Study: Applicants must propose a project to
implement a State-developed or State-approved POS that is built and
sustained with the following 10 Framework components:
(a) Legislation, Resources, and Policies: State and local
legislation, resources, or administrative policies that promote POS
development and implementation;
(b) Partnerships: Ongoing relationships among education, business,
and other community stakeholders that support POS design,
implementation, and maintenance;
(c) Professional Development: Sustained, intensive, and focused
professional development opportunities for administrators, teachers,
and faculty that foster POS design, implementation, and maintenance;
(d) Accountability and Evaluation Systems: Accountability and
evaluation systems and strategies that gather quantitative and
qualitative data on both POS components and student outcomes in order
to inform ongoing efforts to develop and implement POSs and to
determine their effectiveness;
(e) College and Career Readiness Standards: POS content standards
that define what students are expected to know and be able to do to
enter and advance in college, their careers, or both, and that include
aligned academic and technical content;
(f) Course Sequences of Secondary and Postsecondary Courses: Course
sequences within a POS that help students transition to postsecondary
education without needing to duplicate classes or enroll in remedial
courses.
(g) Credit Transfer Agreements: Formal credit transfer agreements
among secondary schools and postsecondary institutions;
(h) Comprehensive Guidance Counseling and Academic Advisory
Systems: Systems that provide career counseling and academic advisory
services to help students make informed decisions about which POS to
pursue;
(i) Teaching and Learning Strategies: Innovative and creative
instructional approaches that enable teachers to integrate academic and
technical instruction and also enable students to apply academic and
technical learning in their POS coursework; and
(j) Technical Skills Assessments: Existing valid and reliable
technical skills assessments that provide ongoing information on the
extent to which students are attaining the necessary knowledge and
skills for entry into and advancement in postsecondary education and
careers in their chosen POS.
Each of these 10 components of the Framework has unique sub-
components. The sub-components for each of the 10 components are in the
Proposed Selection Criteria in this notice, under proposed paragraph
(a)(3), State capacity to implement a rigorous program of study. Each
State and its participating LEAs must use all the sub-components of the
10 Framework components that the State deems relevant to the selected
POS and must explain how it plans to support the selected POS utilizing
the relevant subcomponents.
Existing Technical Skills Assessments: Applicants must propose a
project to implement a State-developed or State-approved POS for which
valid and reliable technical skills assessments (either third-party
industry-recognized assessments, or State-developed or State-approved
technical skills assessments based on industry standards that grant
high school or postsecondary credit, or both) have been developed.
Local Implementation: Applicants must propose a project to
implement the selected POS in at least three LEAs that contain high
schools, in concert with each LEA's postsecondary partners. If a
participating LEA contains more than one high school, the LEA must
implement the selected POS in at least one of its high schools. To the
extent feasible, participating LEAs must implement the POS in at least
one urban, one suburban, and one rural community. To be eligible for
funding an applicant will be required to
[[Page 29736]]
demonstrate that the LEAs chosen for participation in the POS project
have the capacity to have all 10 Framework components in place by the
beginning of year 2 of the project. The applicant must include a letter
of commitment from each LEA, expressing its interest in participating
in the project and its commitment to implement the selected POS as
prescribed by the State in years 2 through 4 of the grant and to
maintain constancy in the implementation of the selected POS. During
year 1 of the grant, CTE staff from the funded States must provide
technical assistance to their participating LEAs in order to strengthen
weak components or incorporate missing components, so that all 10
components are in place to support the POS when it is implemented at
the LEA level. The participating LEAs must implement the selected POS
during years 2 through 4 of the grant, beginning at the start of the
academic year corresponding to year 2 of the grant. The applicant must
include a plan that describes how CTE State staff will continue to work
closely with the LEAs throughout the project period, and provide
technical assistance and support to ensure constancy in the
implementation of the selected POS in the participating LEAs.
Evaluation: Applicants must propose to conduct an annual evaluation
of the project to assess the constancy of the implementation of the
selected POS in the participating LEAs and the effectiveness of each of
the 10 components. To ensure consistency of implementation across the
selected LEAs, CTE staff from the funded States must use a self-
assessment instrument based on the 10 components as part of its project
evaluation.
Applicants must also use student outcome data to assess the
progress of students enrolled in the selected POS. To ensure
consistency across the funded States, State staff must attend a POS
Evaluation Design meeting in Washington, DC, following the receipt of
the grant award, to discuss and possibly refine the grantee self-
assessment tools related to the 10 Framework components that are
developed by the grantees, and to work with OVAE and with each other to
develop a plan for the States' use of student outcome data to assess
the progress of students enrolled in the selected POS. This meeting
will address evaluation and data collection issues, such as student
definitions, the number and method of selection of students to be
followed, strategies for comparing outcomes for students who
participate in the POS to other students who do not, the identification
of potential comparison groups through the States' longitudinal data
systems, and timing of reporting. After the meeting, we will include
the agreed-upon plan for the States' use of the student outcome data as
an addendum to each grantee's cooperative agreement.
The State must also collect and report data annually on the
following performance measures, which are based on the indicators of
performance required under section 113(b) (State Performance Measures)
and section 203(e) (Tech Prep Indicators of Performance and
Accountability) of the Act:
(a) Secondary school completion. The percentage of secondary
students participating in the POS supported by the grant award who earn
a high school diploma.
(b) Technical skills attainment. The percentage of secondary
students participating in the POS supported by the grant award who
attain technical skills.
(c) Earned postsecondary credit during high school. The percentage
of secondary students participating in the POS supported by the grant
award who earn postsecondary credit.
(d) Enrollment in postsecondary education. The percentage of
secondary students participating in the POS supported by the grant
award who enroll in postsecondary education by the fall following high
school graduation.
(e) Enrollment in postsecondary education in a field or major
related to the secondary POS. The percentage of secondary students
participating in the POS supported by the grant award who enroll in a
postsecondary education program in a field or major related to the
participant's secondary POS.
(f) Need for developmental course work in postsecondary education.
The percentage of secondary students participating in the POS supported
by the grant award who enroll in one or more postsecondary education
developmental courses.
(g) Postsecondary credential, certificate, or diploma attainment.
The percentage of secondary students participating in the POS supported
by the grant award who attain an industry-recognized credential,
certificate, or associate's degree, within two years following
enrollment in postsecondary education.
Capacity of Statewide Longitudinal Data System: Applicants must
propose the use of a longitudinal data system that has the capacity to
link and share data among systems housing different types of data. The
longitudinal data system must contain, at a minimum, the elements
listed below. These elements are consistent with section 6401(e)(2)(D)
of the America Competes Act (Pub. L. 110-69):
(a) Statewide unique student identifiers;
(b) Student-level enrollment data;
(c) Student-level course completion (transcript) data;
(d) The ability to match student-level secondary and postsecondary
data;
(e) The ability to link student-level data to employment outcome
data, such as Unemployment Insurance (UI) wage records; and
(f) A State data audit plan to verify that the education data are
valid and reliable.
Applicants also must ensure (and include an assurance in their
applications) that their use of data will be consistent with the
requirements and protections contained in the Family Educational Rights
and Privacy Act (FERPA).
Dissemination: Applicants must propose to implement a dissemination
plan for the project. The plan must include the development and
maintenance of a project Web page for posting project materials, such
as: Materials describing the State's process for approving POSs
submitted by local recipients of funds; curricula developed for the
selected POS; technical assistance materials provided to the
participating LEAs and to other local recipients of funds, if
applicable; professional development materials; materials describing
evaluation results, including performance data on the required
performance measures based on the indicators of performance; and other
materials containing practical information that would be useful to
other States in their efforts to implement and evaluate POSs.
Applicants must also participate in POS activities sponsored by the
Department, such as annual POS grantee meetings in which grantees
describe the progress of their projects and discuss common issues,
strategies, and models of best practices; OVAE/POS grantee
presentations at the States' Annual National Career Clusters
Institutes; OVAE/POS grantee presentations at annual NASDCTEc meetings;
and presentations at OVAE-sponsored data quality meetings.
Cooperative Agreement: We plan to make each award to grantees under
this program under the terms of a cooperative agreement. We expect to
work closely with the funded States to maintain substantial involvement
in project implementation, and to provide oversight on project
activities by working collaboratively to develop a
[[Page 29737]]
plan for the use of student outcome data, reviewing and approving
project activities, reviewing and approving one stage of work before
the grantee can begin a subsequent stage during the project period, and
halting an activity if it is not consistent with the program
requirements.
Proposed Selection Criteria:
Background:
The first competition under the POS program was held in 2008. Since
then, we have gained a better understanding of the level and complexity
of the work required for effective POS implementation and of the
program components that are necessary to implement rigorous POSs. The
selection criteria proposed in this notice emphasize the implementation
of POSs that are built and sustained with the 10 specific Framework
components and the collection of valid and reliable longitudinal data,
to ensure consistency across funded projects in the implementation and
evaluation of POSs.
Proposed Selection Criteria:
The Assistant Secretary proposes the following selection criteria
for evaluating an application under a POS competition. We may apply one
or more of these criteria in any year in which we hold a competition
under this program. In a notice inviting applications, in the
application package, or in both, we will announce the maximum possible
points assigned to each criterion.
(a) State capacity to implement a rigorous program of study: In
determining the applicant's capacity to implement a rigorous POS, we
review each application to determine the extent to which:
(1) The applicant proposes to build on existing State initiatives
and partnerships in implementing the proposed project.
(2) The applicant selects a POS that will provide training leading
to high-growth, high-demand, or high-wage occupations as determined
through analysis of the national, State, or local labor market.
(3) The applicant provides evidence that it has selected a State-
developed or State-approved POS that is built and sustained with the
following 10 Framework components; that it has identified which of the
sub-components from among those listed under each component are
relevant to the selected POS; and that it plans to use those relevant
sub-components in its POS and explains how it proposes to do so.
(i) State and local legislation, resources, or administrative
policies that promote POS development and implementation, such as--
(A) The allocation of State or local funding (and other non-Federal
resources) designed to promote POS development and long-term
sustainability;
(B) The use of established, formal procedures for the design,
implementation, and continuous improvement of POSs;
(C) Adherence to policies that ensure opportunities for any
interested secondary student to participate in a POS; and
(D) The use of individual graduation or career plans for
participating students.
(ii) Ongoing relationships among education, business, and other
community stakeholders that support POS design, implementation, and
maintenance, such as by--
(A) Using written memoranda that specify the roles and
responsibilities of partnership members;
(B) Conducting ongoing analyses of economic and workforce trends to
identify POSs that should be created, expanded, or, if appropriate,
discontinued;
(C) Linking POS development to existing initiatives that promote
workforce and economic development; and
(D) Identifying, validating, and updating technical and workforce
readiness skills to be taught within POSs.
(iii) Sustained, intensive, and focused professional development
opportunities for administrators, teachers, and faculty that foster POS
design, implementation, and maintenance, and that--
(A) Support the alignment of academic and technical curriculum
within the POS from grade to grade (within grades 9 through 12) and
from secondary to postsecondary education;
(B) Support the development of integrated academic and CTE
curriculum and instruction within the POS;
(C) Ensure that teachers and faculty have the necessary content
knowledge to align and integrate curriculum and instruction within the
POS; and
(D) Foster innovative teaching and learning strategies within the
POS.
(iv) Accountability and evaluation systems and strategies that
gather quantitative and qualitative data on both POS components and
student outcomes to inform ongoing efforts to develop and implement
POSs and to determine their effectiveness, and that--
(A) Yield valid and reliable data on key student outcomes
(indicators of performance) referenced in the Act and other relevant
Federal and State legislation; and
(B) Provide timely data to inform ongoing efforts to develop,
implement, evaluate, and improve the effectiveness of POSs.
(v) POS content standards that define what students are expected to
know and be able to do to enter and advance in college, their careers,
or both, and that include aligned academic and technical content, and
that--
(A) Are developed and continually validated in collaboration with
secondary, postsecondary, and industry partners;
(B) Incorporate essential knowledge and skills that students must
master regardless of their chosen career area or POS;
(C) Provide the same rigorous knowledge and skills in English-
language arts and mathematics that employers and colleges expect of
high school graduates; and
(D) To the extent practicable, are internationally benchmarked so
that students are prepared to succeed in a global economy.
(vi) Course sequences within a POS that help ensure students'
transition to postsecondary education without needing to duplicate
classes or enroll in remedial courses, as evidenced by--
(A) Course sequence plans that map out recommended academic and
career and technical courses for the POS;
(B) Course sequence plans that begin with introductory courses at
the secondary level by teaching broad foundational knowledge and skills
common across all POSs and then progress to more occupationally
specific courses at the postsecondary level that provide the knowledge
and skills required for entry into and advancement in the selected POS;
and
(C) Opportunities for students to earn postsecondary credit for
coursework taken during high school.
(vii) Formal credit transfer agreements among secondary schools and
postsecondary institutions that--
(A) Provide a systematic, seamless process for students to earn
college credit for postsecondary courses taken in high school, transfer
high school credit to any two- or four-year institution in the State
that offers the POS, and transfer credit earned at a two-year college
to any other two- or four-year institution in the State that offers the
POS;
(B) Record college credit earned by high school students on their
high school transcripts at the time the credit is earned so that they
can transfer seamlessly into the college portion of the POS without the
need for additional paperwork or petitioning for credit; and
[[Page 29738]]
(C) Describe the expectations and requirements for teacher and
faculty qualifications, course prerequisites, postsecondary entry
requirements, location of courses, tuition reimbursement, and the
credit transfer process.
(viii) Comprehensive guidance counseling and academic advisory
systems that provide career counseling and academic advisory services
to help students make informed decisions about which POS to pursue and
that--
(A) Are based on State or local guidance and counseling standards,
such as the National Career Development Guidelines;
(B) Ensure that guidance counselors and academic advisors have
access to up-to-date information about POS offerings to aid students in
their decision-making;
(C) Offer information and tools to help students learn about
postsecondary education and career options, including about the
prerequisites for particular POSs;
(D) Provide resources for students to identify career interests and
aptitudes and to select an appropriate POS;
(E) Provide information and resources for parents, including
workshops on college and financial aid applications, on helping their
children prepare for college and careers; and
(F) Provide Web-based resources and tools for obtaining student
financial assistance.
(ix) Innovative and creative instructional approaches that enable
teachers to integrate academic and technical instruction and students
to apply academic and technical learning in their POS coursework, as
evidenced by--
(A) Interdisciplinary teaching teams of academic and career and
technical secondary teachers or postsecondary faculty;
(B) The use of contextualized work-based, project-based, and
problem-based learning approaches; and
(C) The use of teaching strategies that foster team-building,
critical thinking, problem-solving, and communication skills.
(x) Existing Valid and reliable technical skills assessments that
provide ongoing information on the extent to which students are
attaining the necessary knowledge and skills for entry into and
advancement in postsecondary education and careers in their chosen POS
and that--
(A) Are either third-party assessments recognized by industry or
are technical skills assessments developed or approved by the State
that are based on industry standards;
(B) Measure student attainment of technical skill proficiencies at
multiple points during a POS;
(C) Incorporate, to the greatest extent possible, performance-based
assessment items through which students must demonstrate the
application of their knowledge and skills; and
(D) Result in the awarding of secondary credit, postsecondary
credit, or special designation on a student's high school diploma.
(b) Capacity of the State's longitudinal data system: In
determining the State's capacity to collect longitudinal data on a
variety of secondary, postsecondary, and employment outcomes for
individual students in order to assess the progress of students
enrolled in the selected POS, we review each application to determine
the extent to which:
(1) The State's longitudinal data system contains, at a minimum,
the following elements--
(i) Statewide unique student identifiers;
(ii) Student-level enrollment data;
(iii) Student-level course completion (transcript) data;
(iv) The ability to match student-level secondary and postsecondary
data;
(v) The ability to link student-level data with employment outcome
data, such as Unemployment Insurance (UI) wage records; and
(vi) A State data audit plan to verify that the education data are
valid and reliable.
(2) The applicant provides evidence that project staff from the
funded States will be able to work cooperatively with State data
specialists and to access the student outcome data needed to meet
annual evaluation and reporting requirements for the POS project.
(c) Local implementation plan:
In determining the quality of the plan for local implementation of
the selected POS, we review each application to determine the extent to
which--
(1) The applicant identifies each of the LEAs it has selected for
local implementation of the POS and provides evidence of each LEA's
capacity to implement the selected POS and the 10 components, as well
as the estimated number of students who would participate in the POS in
years 2 through 4 of the grant, by grade level.
(2) The participating LEAs represent urban, suburban, and rural
communities; and
(3) The applicant includes a letter of commitment from each LEA,
expressing its interest in participating in the project and its
commitment to implementing the selected POS as prescribed by the State
in years 2 through 4 of the grant and to maintain constancy in the
implementation of the selected POS.
(4) In the case of LEAs that do not have all 10 components in place
at the start of the project, the applicant outlines the specific
actions it will take to ensure that weak or missing components are
strengthened or created so that all 10 components are in place and the
LEA is ready to implement the POS by the beginning of the academic year
corresponding to year 2 of the grant.
(5) The applicant outlines a plan to provide ongoing oversight and
technical assistance to the participating LEAs throughout the project
period, to ensure constancy in the implementation of the selected POS
across the participating LEAs.
(d) Project management. In determining the quality of the
management plan for the proposed project, we review each application to
determine the extent to which--
(1) The management plan incorporates, at a minimum, each of the
proposed requirements included in this notice, and identifies specific
and measurable objectives and tasks to be undertaken to accomplish each
project activity;
(2) The management plan assigns responsibility for the
accomplishment of project tasks to specific partners or project
personnel and provides timelines that will result in the timely
completion of all required project activities within each phase of the
project;
(3) The Project Director and other key personnel clearly have the
professional qualifications and experience necessary to implement their
assigned project tasks; and
(4) The time commitments of the Project Director, key personnel,
and partners are appropriate to the tasks assigned.
(e) Adequacy of resources. In determining the adequacy of resources
for the proposed project, we consider the following factors:
(1) The adequacy of support to be provided (i.e., facilities,
equipment, supplies, or other resources) by participating agencies and
institutions at the State and local levels.
(2) Whether the budget is appropriate and the costs are reasonable
in relation to the objectives and design of the proposed project.
(f) Evaluation: In determining the quality of the proposed project
evaluation, we review each application to determine the extent to
which--
(1) The proposed project evaluation is feasible and appropriate for
evaluating the constancy of the implementation of
[[Page 29739]]
the selected POS by the participating LEAs in years 2 through 4 of the
grant.
(2) The proposed evaluation is feasible and appropriate for
evaluating the effectiveness of each of the 10 components in each LEA.
(3) The proposed evaluation will be conducted by individuals or
entities that possess the necessary background and expertise in project
evaluation.
(4) The applicant expresses its commitment to participate in the
Department's Evaluation Design Meeting and has included suggestions
regarding the use of student outcome data that it could access through
the State's longitudinal data system to assess the progress of students
enrolled in the POS.
We will announce the final priorities, requirements, and selection
criteria in a notice in the Federal Register. We will determine the
final priorities, requirements, and selection criteria after
considering responses to this notice and other information available to
the Department. This notice does not preclude us from proposing
additional priorities, requirements, definitions, or selection
criteria, 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 priorities,
requirements, and selection criteria, we invite applications through
a notice in the Federal Register.
Executive Order 12866: This notice 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 proposed regulatory
action.
The potential costs associated with this proposed regulatory action
are those resulting from statutory requirements and those we have
determined as necessary for administering this program effectively and
efficiently.
In assessing the potential costs and benefits--both quantitative
and qualitative--of this proposed regulatory action, we have determined
that the benefits of the proposed priorities, requirements, and
selection criteria justify the costs. This action would provide
additional resources to States to help them implement an existing
statutory requirement under the Act, the implementation of programs of
study at the State and local levels.
We have determined, also, that this proposed regulatory action does
not unduly interfere with State, local, and tribal governments in the
exercise of their governmental functions.
Intergovernmental Review: This program is 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 this program.
Accessible Format: Individuals with disabilities can obtain this
document in an accessible format (e.g., Braille, large print,
audiotape, or computer diskette) on request to the program contact
person listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
Electronic Access to This Document: You can view this document, as
well as all other documents of this Department published in the Federal
Register, in text or Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF) on the
Internet at the following site: https://www.ed.gov/news/fedregister. To
use PDF you must have Adobe Acrobat Reader, which is available free at
this site.
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/.
Brenda Dann-Messier,
Assistant Secretary for Vocational and Adult Education.
[FR Doc. 2010-12802 Filed 5-26-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000-01-P