Proposed Requirements-School Improvement Grants-Title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, 53253-53275 [2014-21185]
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Vol. 79
Monday,
No. 173
September 8, 2014
Part II
Department of Education
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34 CFR Chapter II
Proposed Requirements—School Improvement Grants—Title I of the
Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965; Proposed Rule
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34 CFR Chapter II
Therefore, commenters should be careful to
include in their comments only information
that they wish to make publicly available.
RIN 1810–AB22
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
[Docket ID ED–2014–OESE–0079]
Proposed Requirements—School
Improvement Grants—Title I of the
Elementary and Secondary Education
Act of 1965
Office of Elementary and
Secondary Education, Department of
Education (Department).
ACTION: Proposed requirements.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Secretary of
Education (Secretary) proposes revising
the final requirements for the School
Improvement Grants (SIG) program,
published in the Federal Register on
October 28, 2010, authorized under
section 1003(g) of title I of the
Elementary and Secondary Education
Act of 1965, as amended (ESEA), to
implement language in the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2014, that allows
local educational agencies (LEAs) to
implement additional interventions,
provides flexibility for rural LEAs, and
extends the grant period from three to
five years. Additionally, the proposed
requirements make changes that reflect
lessons learned from four years of SIG
implementation.
DATES: We must receive your comments
on or before October 8, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments
through the Federal eRulemaking Portal
or via postal mail, commercial delivery,
or hand delivery. We will not accept
comments submitted by fax or by email
or those submitted after the comment
period. To ensure that we do not receive
duplicate copies, please submit your
comments only once. In addition, please
include the Docket ID at the top of your
comments.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
www.regulations.gov to submit your
comments electronically. Information
on using Regulations.gov, including
instructions for accessing agency
documents, submitting comments, and
viewing the docket, is available on the
site under ‘‘Are you new to the site?’’
• Postal Mail, Commercial Delivery,
or Hand Delivery: If you mail or deliver
your comments about these proposed
regulations, address them to Elizabeth
Ross, U.S. Department of Education, 400
Maryland Avenue SW., room 3C116,
Washington, DC 20202.
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SUMMARY:
Privacy Note: The Department’s policy is
to make all comments received from
members of the public available for public
viewing in their entirety on the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at www.regulations.gov.
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Elizabeth Ross, U.S. Department of
Education, 400 Maryland Avenue SW.,
room 3C116, Washington, DC 20202.
Telephone: (202) 260–8961 or by email:
Elizabeth.Ross@ed.gov.
If you use a telecommunications
device for the deaf (TDD) or a text
telephone (TTY), call the Federal Relay
Service (FRS), toll free, at 1–800–877–
8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Executive Summary
Purpose of This Regulatory Action:
These proposed requirements would
implement language in the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2014, to allow
LEAs to implement evidence-based,
whole-school reform strategies and
State-determined school improvement
intervention models, provide flexibility
for rural LEAs implementing a SIG
intervention, and extend the allowable
grant period from three to five years.
Additionally, the proposed
requirements would make changes that
reflect lessons learned from four years of
SIG implementation. This regulatory
action is authorized by the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2014 (Public Law
113–76) and 20 U.S.C. 6303(g).
Summary of the Major Provisions of
This Regulatory Action: As discussed in
more depth in the Proposed Changes
section of this document, the
Department proposes the following
revisions to the current SIG
requirements to implement language in
the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2014: Allowing five-year SIG awards;
adding State-determined school
improvement intervention models;
adding evidence-based, whole-school
reform strategies; and allowing rural
LEAs to modify one SIG intervention
model element.
The Department also proposes the
following revisions to the current SIG
requirements to strengthen program
implementation based on lessons
learned and input from stakeholders:
Adding an intervention model that
focuses on improving educational
outcomes in preschool and early grades,
adding an LEA requirement to
demonstrate the appropriateness of the
chosen intervention model and take into
consideration family and community
input in the selection of the model;
adding an LEA requirement to
continuously engage families and the
community throughout implementation;
adding an LEA requirement to monitor
and support intervention
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implementation; adding an LEA
requirement to regularly review external
providers’ performance and hold
external providers accountable;
eliminating the ‘‘rule of nine’’; and
revising reporting requirements.
The Department proposes the
following revisions to current SIG
requirements: Modifying the teacher
and principal evaluation and support
system requirements under the
transformation model; clarifying the
rigorous review process under the
restart model; clarifying renewal
criteria; defining ‘‘greatest need’’ to
include priority and focus schools for
State educational agencies (SEAs) with
approved ESEA flexibility requests;
clarifying flexibility for previously
implemented interventions (in whole or
in part); and clarifying requirements
related to the posting of LEAs’ SIG
applications.
Finally, the Department proposes
removing references to fiscal year 2009
and fiscal year 2010 funds and the
differentiated accountability pilot
because those references are no longer
necessary.
Costs and Benefits: The Department
believes that the benefits of this
regulatory action outweigh any
associated costs to SEAs and LEAs,
which would be financed with grant
funds. The benefits of this action would
be more effective State and local
actions, using Federal funds, to turn
around their lowest-performing schools
and achieve significant improvement in
educational outcomes for the students
attending those schools. Please refer to
the Regulatory Impact Analysis in this
document for a more detailed
discussion of costs and benefits.
Consistent with Executive Order
12866, the Secretary has determined
that this action is economically
significant and, thus, is subject to
review by the Office of Management and
Budget under the order.
Invitation to Comment: We invite you
to submit comments regarding the
proposed revisions described in the
‘‘Proposed Changes’’ section of this
document. To ensure that your
comments have maximum effect in
developing the final requirements, we
urge you to identify clearly the specific
proposed revision that each comment
addresses.
We invite you to assist us in
complying with the specific
requirements of Executive Orders 12866
and 13563 and their overall requirement
of reducing regulatory burden that
might result from these proposed
requirements. Please let us know of any
further ways we could reduce potential
costs or increase potential benefits
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commitment to ensuring that the funds
are used to provide adequate resources
to enable the lowest-achieving schools
to meet their goals for substantially
raising the achievement of their
students.
Division H, title III of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014
(Public Law 113–76), signed into law on
January 17, 2014, made significant
changes to the SIG program. These
proposed requirements would
implement these changes, make other
revisions that reflect lessons learned
from four years of SIG implementation,
and help ensure consistency between
this program and other Department
initiatives.
In interpreting the relevant provisions
of the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2014, and in considering changes to the
current requirements, the Department
was guided by the following principles:
(1) Preserve and protect the key benefits
and rigor of the SIG program, which has
helped SEAs and LEAs implement
rigorous, comprehensive interventions
in their lowest-performing schools; (2)
minimize disruption to existing State
and local program implementation; and
(3) strengthen program implementation
wherever possible based on lessons
learned and input from stakeholders.
The requirements proposed here
would apply to the LEA subgrant
competitions that SEAs conduct during
the 2014–2015 school year for
implementation beginning in the 2015–
2016 school year.
Program Authority: 20 U.S.C. 6303(g);
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014 (Pub.
L. 113–76).
Proposed Changes
Proposed Requirements
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while preserving the effective and
efficient administration of the
Department’s programs and activities.
During and after the comment period,
you may inspect all public comments
about this document by accessing
Regulations.gov. You may also inspect
the comments in person in Room
3W100, 400 Maryland Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC, between 8:30 a.m. and
4:00 p.m., Washington, DC time,
Monday through Friday of each week
except Federal holidays. Please contact
the person listed under FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT.
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 document. 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: In conjunction
with title I funds for school
improvement reserved under section
1003(a) of the ESEA, SIG funds under
section 1003(g) of the ESEA are used to
improve student achievement in title I
schools identified for improvement,
corrective action, or restructuring so as
to enable those schools to make
adequate yearly progress (AYP) and exit
improvement status.
Current Requirements: Consistent
with the current requirements, SEAs
make competitive awards for up to three
years to LEAs to implement SIG
interventions in eligible schools.
Proposed Requirements: Under the
proposed requirements in section II.A.3,
II.A.2(e)(1), II.C.4, and II.C.5, described
in detail below, the Department would
allow an SEA to make a SIG award to
an LEA for up to five years, of which the
LEA may use one school year for
planning and other pre-implementation
activities, must use at least three school
years for full implementation of the
selected interventions, and may use up
to two school years for activities related
to sustaining reforms following at least
three years of full intervention
implementation. If an LEA receives
funding for a school year for planning
and other pre-implementation activities,
it would be eligible for only one year of
funding for activities related to
sustaining reforms following full
intervention implementation. An LEA
Background
The Department issued final
requirements for the SIG program on
December 10, 2009 (74 FR 65618). On
January 21, 2010, the Department
subsequently published interim final
requirements (75 FR 3375), which
became final on October 28, 2010 (75 FR
66363).
The SIG program provides grants to
support rigorous interventions aimed at
turning around our Nation’s persistently
lowest-achieving schools. In general,
SEAs that receive funds under the SIG
program competitively subgrant those
funds to LEAs to implement one of four
interventions defined in current
requirements: The turnaround model,
the restart model, school closure, and
the transformation model. In awarding
SIG funds, an SEA must give priority to
LEAs with the lowest-achieving schools
that demonstrate (1) the greatest need
for the funds and (2) the strongest
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Allowing Five-Year Awards
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may not receive more than five years of
continuous funding for the
implementation of a single SIG
intervention with respect to any
particular school.
Specifically, the Department proposes
adding in section II.A.3 (LEA
requirements) a requirement that an
LEA that intends to use the first year of
its SIG award for planning and other
pre-implementation activities for an
eligible school must include in its
application to the SEA a description of
the planning or pre-implementation
activities it will undertake, the timeline
for implementing those activities, and a
description of how those activities will
lead to successful implementation of the
selected intervention.
In section II.A.2(e)(1), the Department
also proposes to explicitly require an
LEA to fully implement a SIG
intervention in a school for at least three
years (subject to the SEA’s renewal
authority), consistent with the current
requirements.
The Department also proposes adding
two requirements regarding renewal of
annual SIG awards to section II.C of the
current requirements. First, we propose
in section II.C.4 that prior to renewing
the SIG award of an LEA that received
SIG funds for a school year of planning
and other pre-implementation activities
for a school, an SEA would be required
to review the performance of the school
against the LEA’s approved application.
The SEA would conduct this review to
determine whether the LEA will be able
to fully implement its chosen
intervention for the school beginning
the first day of the following school
year. Second, the Department proposes
in section II.C.5 to permit an SEA to
renew an LEA’s SIG award for a school,
after three years of full implementation
of an intervention in that school, for up
to two additional years for continued
full implementation of the intervention
or for activities that are related to
sustaining reforms (but do not constitute
full intervention implementation), based
on the same criteria that an SEA
considers in making renewal decisions
under section II.C.1–II.C.2. Under this
proposal, an LEA would not be
permitted to receive more than five
years of continuous SIG funding with
respect to any particular school.
Reasons: The Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2014, allows the
Secretary to permit an SEA to establish
an award period of up to five years for
each participating LEA, thereby
providing more time than allowed
under current requirements for LEAs to
implement SIG interventions.
Additionally, the Department’s
proposed requirements would allow
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flexibility in two important ways to
strengthen SIG implementation. First,
the proposed requirements allow one
school year for LEA planning prior to
full implementation of a SIG
intervention for those LEAs and schools
that would benefit from that time.
Although an LEA may currently use SIG
funds for the planning and other
activities it conducts between the time
it receives a SIG award and the
beginning of the first school year of
implementation (i.e., the following
school year), the Department has
determined that this ‘‘preimplementation’’ period may not be
sufficient to ensure that LEAs are
prepared to implement SIG
interventions effectively at the
beginning of the first school year of
implementation. For example, SEAs
typically make SIG awards to LEAs in
spring or early summer, which in some
LEAs is after personnel contracts have
been negotiated and signed for the
following school year, thus preventing
the personnel changes required by
certain SIG interventions. Accordingly,
the additional planning time permitted
under the proposed requirements may
lead to greater success in
implementation by recognizing the long
lead times that may be necessary to
make the fundamental structural and
personnel changes required by SIG
interventions and to engage sufficiently
school staff, families, and the broader
community in the planning and preimplementation work of turning around
a low-performing school. This proposed
requirement would not affect the
requirement to implement an
intervention for a full school year in
order for that school year to count as
one of the three required years of full
implementation.
To help ensure that a planning year in
a particular school will lead to greater
success in implementation, the
proposed requirements require (1) an
LEA seeking funds for a planning year
in a particular school to describe in its
application to the SEA the planning or
pre-implementation activities it will
undertake, the timeline for
implementing those activities, and a
description of how those activities will
lead to successful implementation of the
selected intervention and (2) an SEA to
review the school’s performance during
the planning year against the LEA’s
approved application prior to renewing
the portion of the LEA’s grant for that
school for full implementation in the
following school year.
Second, the proposed requirements
address the difficulty that LEAs may
face in sustaining SIG-funded reforms
after the implementation period by
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permitting an SEA to renew an LEA’s
SIG award for each school for up to two
additional years for sustainabilityrelated activities, based on the same
criteria that an SEA considers in making
renewal decisions under section II.C.1–
II.C.2. LEAs could use this additional
time to ensure that SIG reforms have
been successfully integrated into each
school’s ongoing operations. The
Department expects that LEAs will
request lower funding amounts for
planning- and sustainability-related
activities as compared to amounts for
the years of full intervention
implementation because these activities
should be less costly than those related
to full implementation.
Adding State-Determined School
Improvement Intervention Models
Current Requirements: None.
Proposed Requirements: The
Department proposes in section I.A.2(g)
to allow an LEA to use SIG funds to
implement, in one or more SIG-eligible
schools, a State-determined intervention
model that has been developed or
adopted by its SEA and that has been
approved by the Secretary.
Under section II.B.1(b) of the
proposed requirements, each SEA may
submit, as part of its SIG application to
the Department, one State-determined
intervention model for review and
approval by the Secretary. Under this
proposal, a State-determined
intervention model must (1) be aligned
with the ‘‘turnaround principles’’
established under ESEA flexibility 1 and
(2) provide for increased learning time
(ILT), as defined in the current
requirements and unchanged in these
proposed requirements.2 Specifically, to
1 ‘‘ESEA flexibility’’ refers to flexibility the
Department offered SEAs regarding specific
requirements of the ESEA in exchange for rigorous
and comprehensive State-developed plans designed
to improve educational outcomes for all students,
close achievement gaps, increase equity, and
improve the quality of instruction. Forty-three
States, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico are
approved for ESEA flexibility. More information
about ESEA flexibility, including detailed
information about the turnaround principles, can be
found in the document ESEA Flexibility, updated
June 7, 2012, available at https://www2.ed.gov/
policy/elsec/guid/esea-flexibility/.
2 The current requirements define ILT as using a
longer school day, week, or year schedule to
significantly increase the total number of school
hours to include additional time for:
(a) Instruction in core academic subjects
including English, reading or language arts,
mathematics, science, foreign languages, civics and
government, economics, arts, history, and
geography;
(b) Instruction in other subjects and enrichment
activities that contribute to a well-rounded
education, including, for example, physical
education, service learning, and experiential and
work-based learning opportunities that are provided
by partnering, as appropriate, with other
organizations; and
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be approved under proposed section
II.B.1(b), a State-determined
intervention model would be required
to:
(1) Ensure strong leadership by: (A)
Requiring a review of the performance
of the current principal; (B) requiring
replacement of the principal, if such a
change is necessary to ensure strong and
effective leadership, or requiring the
LEA to demonstrate to the SEA that the
current principal has a track record in
improving achievement and has the
ability to lead the turnaround effort; and
(C) requiring the LEA to provide the
principal with operational flexibility in
the areas of scheduling, staff,
curriculum, and budget;
(2) Ensure that teachers are effective
and able to improve instruction by: (A)
Requiring a review of all staff and
retaining only those who are determined
to be effective and to have the ability to
be successful in supporting the
turnaround effort; (B) preventing
ineffective teachers from transferring to
a SIG-funded school; and (C) providing
job-embedded, ongoing professional
development informed by the teacher
evaluation and support systems and tied
to teachers’ and students’ needs;
(3) Establish schedules and
implement strategies that provide ILT;
(4) Strengthen the school’s
instructional program by ensuring that it
(A) is research-based, rigorous, and
aligned with State academic content
standards; and (B) meets students’
needs;
(5) Use data to inform instruction and
for continuous improvement, including
through the provision of time for
collaboration on the use of data;
(6) Establish a school environment
that improves school safety and
discipline and addresses other nonacademic factors that impact student
achievement, such as students’ social,
emotional, and health needs; and
(7) Provide ongoing mechanisms for
family and community engagement.
An intervention that the Secretary
approved as part of an SEA’s ESEA
flexibility request that also includes ILT
would be considered to have met these
criteria.
Reasons: The Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2014, permits an
LEA to use SIG funds to implement a
State-determined intervention model
that has been approved by the Secretary.
As part of ESEA flexibility, the
Department established the ‘‘turnaround
principles’’ to guide SEAs in developing
rigorous interventions to turn around
(c) Teachers to collaborate, plan, and engage in
professional development within and across grades
and subjects.
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their ‘‘priority’’ schools, as those
schools are defined in ESEA flexibility.
The turnaround principles are based on
the elements of the SIG transformation
model, but provide additional flexibility
with respect to replacing the principal
and implementing ILT. This additional
flexibility reflects, in part, the
recognition that LEAs with priority
schools may not receive additional
funding through the SIG program to
support the implementation of
interventions in these schools. The
Department believes, based on
experience thus far with SIG and ESEA
flexibility, that the turnaround
principles provide a baseline
expectation for the elements of
comprehensive, whole-school reform
consistent with the purpose of the SIG
program and, thus, reflect appropriate
criteria for use by the Secretary in
approving a State-determined
intervention model. Further, linking
approval of State-determined
intervention models to the turnaround
principles will facilitate and simplify
the approval and implementation
process for this new intervention model
because many States have already
developed rigorous interventions for
their priority schools under ESEA
flexibility that are consistent with the
turnaround principles. SEAs that
receive approval of their Statedetermined intervention model would
then be able to use SIG funds to support
their multi-year plans under ESEA
flexibility for implementing rigorous
interventions in their priority schools
that meet the definition of ‘‘priority
schools’’ in ESEA flexibility.
In addition to ensuring that any Statedetermined intervention model is
consistent with the turnaround
principles, the proposed requirements
provide that a State-determined
intervention model must include the
implementation of ILT. The Department
believes that the comprehensive
implementation of ILT would provide
essential support for key improvements
in teaching and learning required by
interventions consistent with the
turnaround principles, and thus should
be included in any State-determined
intervention model approved by the
Secretary. The Department did not
explicitly include ILT in the turnaround
principles of ESEA flexibility due to its
potential costs, which may exceed the
resources available to SEAs and LEAs to
support priority interventions in the
absence of SIG or other dedicated
turnaround funds. However, the
availability of up to $2 million annually
for a school implementing an approved
State-determined intervention model
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through the SIG program mitigates such
resource limitation concerns.
Evidence from the field shows that
increasing learning time in a strategic,
high-quality manner is often a key
element of successful school
turnaround. For example, The Case for
Improving and Expanding Time in
School: A Review of Key Research and
Practice, published in April 2012 by the
National Center on Time and Learning
(NCTL) and available at
www.timeandlearning.org/files/
CaseforMoreTime_1.pdf, summarizes
evidence demonstrating that a longer
school day and longer school year
implemented consistently with the
principles of ILT can have a meaningful
impact on improving student
achievement. Providing time to allow
for enrichment activities, teacher
collaboration, and professional
development, in addition to instruction
in core academic subjects including
math, science, and reading, is key to
ensuring success.
Adding Evidence-Based, Whole-School
Reform Strategies
Current Requirements: None.
Proposed Requirements: Section
I.A.2(e) of the proposed requirements
would allow an LEA to use SIG funds
to implement, in partnership with a
strategy developer, an evidence-based,
whole-school reform strategy in a
school. Under this proposed
requirement, such a strategy must have
evidence of effectiveness that includes
at least two studies that meet What
Works Clearinghouse evidence
standards with or without reservations
(i.e., qualifying experimental or quasiexperimental studies) and that found a
statistically significant favorable impact
on a student academic achievement or
attainment outcome, with no
statistically significant and overriding
unfavorable impacts on that outcome for
relevant populations in the study or in
other studies of the intervention
reviewed by and reported on by the
What Works Clearinghouse.3
The proposed requirements include
two related definitions. First, the
proposed requirements in section I.A.3
define ‘‘whole-school reform strategy’’
as a strategy that (1) is designed to
improve student academic achievement
or attainment; (2) is implemented for all
students in a school; and (3) addresses,
at a minimum and in a comprehensive
and coordinated manner, school
leadership, teaching and learning in at
3 What Works Clearinghouse Procedures and
Standards Handbook (Version 3.0), which can
currently be found at the following link: https://
ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/pdf/reference_resources/wwc_
procedures_v3_0_standards_handbook.pdf.
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least one full academic content area
(including professional learning for
educators), student non-academic
support, and family and community
engagement.4 Second, the proposed
requirements define ‘‘strategy
developer’’ as an entity or individual
that maintains proprietary rights for the
strategy or, if no entity or individual
maintains proprietary rights for the
strategy, an entity or individual that has
a demonstrated record of success in
implementing the strategy in one or
more low-achieving schools or that,
together with a partner LEA, has a highquality plan for implementing the
strategy in a school.
Finally, the Department proposes
adding section I.A.4(a)(10) (Evidence of
strongest commitment), which would
require the SEA, when considering the
strength of the LEA’s commitment, to
evaluate the extent to which an LEA
that is proposing to implement an
evidence-based, whole-school reform
strategy in a school demonstrates that
the evidence supporting the strategy it
proposes to implement includes a
sample population or setting similar to
the population or setting of the school
to be served. The SEA would also
consider the extent to which the LEA
has demonstrated that it has partnered
with a strategy developer that meets the
proposed definition of ‘‘strategy
developer.’’ Notably, under proposed
section II.A.2(c), an LEA would have to
provide evidence of its strong
commitment to use SIG funds to
implement the selected intervention by
addressing the factors in section
I.A.4(a), and under proposed section
II.B.2(b)(2), the SEA would have to
ensure that the LEA’s application makes
the required demonstration prior to
approving the LEA’s application.
Reasons: The Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2014, permits an
LEA to use SIG funds to implement, in
partnership with a strategy developer, a
4 The Department intends to invite strategy
developers and other entities to submit prospective
strategies and research studies of the effectiveness
of those strategies for review against the proposed
evidence requirement discussed in the preceding
paragraph and the requirements of the proposed
definition of ‘‘whole-school reform strategy.’’ The
Department intends to identify, from among the
strategies submitted for review, those that meet
requirements in advance of SEAs’ competitions for
fiscal year 2014 SIG funds. An LEA seeking to use
SIG funds to implement, in partnership with a
strategy developer, an evidence-based, wholeschool reform strategy would be permitted to
choose from among the strategies so identified by
the Department.
The Department will provide information
regarding the submission and review of prospective
strategies on its Web site at https://www.ed.gov/
programs/sif/npr-wholeschlreform.html, and may
re-open the submission and review process, if
necessary, based on the final requirements.
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whole-school reform strategy that is
based on at least a moderate level of
evidence that the strategy will have a
statistically significant effect on student
outcomes, including more than one
experimental or quasi-experimental
study. In addition, as stated in its report
accompanying its fiscal year 2014
appropriations bill for the Department
(Senate Report 113–71), the Senate
Appropriations Committee expects that
any approach taken with SIG funds will
address schoolwide factors, including,
for example, curriculum and
instruction, social and emotional
support services for students, and
training and support for teachers and
school leaders. The proposed
requirements described in this section
are intended to implement the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014,
provision in a manner consistent with
the Senate Committee report language.
The Department notes that 34 CFR
77.1 (Definitions that apply to all
Department programs) defines
‘‘moderate evidence of effectiveness’’ as
including at least one study that, among
other things, meets What Works
Clearinghouse evidence standards with
or without reservations and found a
statistically significant favorable impact
on a relevant outcome. Because the
provision in the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2014, requires more
than one such study as evidence of a
strategy’s effectiveness, the Department
cannot use the definition of ‘‘moderate
evidence of effectiveness’’ in 34 CFR
77.1 to implement the provision and
must instead propose the programspecific evidence requirement in section
I.A.2(e).
The proposed definition of ‘‘wholeschool reform strategy’’ is intended to
ensure that a strategy implemented by
an LEA is consistent not only with the
Senate Committee report language but
also with evidence from the field and
the research literature on whole-school
reform by specifying that the strategy
address, in a comprehensive and
coordinated manner, schoolwide factors
essential to successful school
turnaround efforts.5
The proposed definition of ‘‘strategy
developer,’’ as well as the related
proposed requirements regarding
whether an LEA has partnered with a
5 Stringfield, S., Millsap, M., Yoder, N., Schaffer,
E., Nesselrodt, P., Gamse, B., Brigham, N., Moss, M.,
Herman, R., & Bedinger, S. (1997). Special strategies
studies final report. Washington, DC: U.S.
Department of Education. An executive summary of
the report is available at www.csos.jhu.edu/
Otherlinks/SpecialStrategies/intro.htm, finding that
‘‘[s]tudents in schools working with whole school
reform tended to achieve greater gains than did
students in schools attempting various pull-out
programs.’’
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strategy developer that meets the
proposed definition, are intended to
ensure that the entity or individual with
whom an LEA partners to implement an
evidence-based, whole-school reform
strategy possesses the required
qualifications or has a high-quality plan
for successful implementation of the
strategy in an eligible school.
Finally, the proposed requirements
regarding whether the evidence of
effectiveness for a strategy proposed for
implementation in a school includes a
sample overlapping with the
populations or settings of that school are
intended to ensure the relevance and
appropriateness of the strategy for the
students and the school.
Rural LEAs’ Modification of One SIG
Intervention Model Element
Current Requirements: None.
Proposed Requirements: The
Department proposes to add a provision
in section I.B.6 to permit an LEA that is
eligible for services under subpart 1 or
2 of part B of title VI of the ESEA
(referred to herein as a rural LEA) to
modify one element of the turnaround
or transformation model so long as the
modification meets the intent and
purpose of the original element.
The Department also proposes to
modify the language introducing the
turnaround and transformation models’
requirements in sections I.A.2(a) and
I.A.2(d) of the current requirements to
clarify that those models’ requirements
are ‘‘elements.’’ Other than the proposed
changes discussed in the following
section, the Department is not proposing
to substantively change the elements of
the turnaround and transformation
models themselves.
Additionally, the Department
proposes adding section I.A.4(a)(9)
(Evidence of strongest commitment),
which would require the SEA, when
considering the strength of the LEA’s
commitment, to evaluate the extent to
which a rural LEA applying to
implement the turnaround or
transformation model and modify one
element of that model has demonstrated
that it will meet the intent and purpose
of the original element. For example, if
a rural LEA applying to implement a
turnaround model seeks to modify the
element of the model that requires the
LEA to replace the principal, the LEA
must demonstrate in its application how
it will ensure strong leadership in the
school. The LEA could do this by
demonstrating to the SEA that the
current principal has a track record in
improving student achievement and has
the experience and skills needed to
implement the intervention.
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Finally, the Department proposes
adding reporting requirements to
section III.A.3 that would require an
SEA to report, with respect to schools
receiving SIG funds, the number of
schools implementing models with a
modified element pursuant to proposed
section I.B.6 and which models are
being implemented in those schools.
Reasons: The Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2014, permits an
LEA eligible for services under subpart
1 or 2 of part B of title VI of the ESEA
(Rural Education Achievement Program)
to modify not more than one element of
a SIG intervention model. The proposed
requirements are intended to implement
this flexibility while maintaining the
integrity of the SIG intervention models
in the current requirements and
ensuring that the reporting requirements
capture relevant information about
LEAs availing themselves of this
flexibility.
Adding Early Learning Intervention
Model
Current Requirements: None.
Proposed Requirements: Section
I.A.2(f) of the proposed requirements
would allow an LEA to use SIG funds
to implement an early learning
intervention model in an elementary
school. Under this proposed
requirement, an LEA implementing the
early learning intervention model in an
elementary school must—
(1) Implement each of the following
early learning strategies—
(A) Offer full-day kindergarten;
(B) Establish or expand a high-quality
preschool program;
(C) Provide educators, including
preschool teachers, with time for joint
planning across grades to facilitate
effective teaching and learning and
positive teacher-student interactions.
(2) Replace the principal who led the
school prior to commencement of the
early learning model;
(3) Implement the same rigorous,
transparent, and equitable evaluation
and support systems for teachers and
principals, designed and developed
with teacher and principal involvement,
that the Department proposes to require
under the transformation model;
(4) Use the teacher and principal
evaluation and support system to
identify and reward school leaders,
teachers, and other staff who, in
implementing this model, have
increased student achievement and
identify and remove those who, after
ample opportunities have been provided
for them to improve their professional
practice, have not done so;
(5) Implement such strategies as
financial incentives, increased
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opportunities for promotion and career
growth, and more flexible work
conditions that are designed to recruit,
place, and retain staff with the skills
necessary to meet the needs of students
in the school, taking into consideration
the results from the teacher and
principal evaluation and support
system, if applicable;
(6) Use data to identify and
implement an instructional program
that (a) is research-based,
developmentally appropriate, and
vertically aligned from one grade to the
next as well as aligned with State early
learning and development standards
and State academic standards and (b) in
the early grades, promotes the full range
of academic content across domains of
development, including math and
science, language and literacy, socioemotional skills, self-regulation, and
executive functions;
(7) Promote the continuous use of
student data (such as from formative,
interim, and summative assessments) to
inform and differentiate instruction in
order to meet the educational and
developmental needs of individual
students; and
(8) Provide staff ongoing, high-quality,
job-embedded professional development
such as coaching and mentoring (e.g.,
regarding subject-specific pedagogy,
instruction that reflects a deeper
understanding of the community served
by the school, or differentiated
instruction) that is aligned with the
school’s comprehensive instructional
program and designed with school staff
to ensure they are equipped to facilitate
effective teaching and learning and have
the capacity to implement successfully
school reform strategies.
The Department also proposes adding
to section I.A.3 the definition of ‘‘highquality preschool program’’ based on
the definition that is used in the
Preschool Development Grants
program.6 Under this definition, ‘‘highquality preschool program’’ would mean
an early learning program that includes
structural elements that are evidencebased and nationally recognized as
important for ensuring program quality,
including at a minimum—
(1) High staff qualifications, including
a teacher with a bachelor’s degree in
early childhood education or a
bachelor’s degree in any field with a
State-approved alternate pathway,
which may include coursework, clinical
practice, and evidence of knowledge of
content and pedagogy relating to early
6 See the notice inviting applications for the
Preschool Development Grants program, published
in the Federal Register on August 18, 2014 (79 FR
48853).
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childhood, and teaching assistants with
appropriate credentials;
(2) High-quality professional
development for all staff;
(3) A child-to-instructional staff ratio
of no more than 10 to 1;
(4) A class size of no more than 20
with, at a minimum, one teacher with
high staff qualifications as outlined in
paragraph (1) of this definition;
(5) A full-day program;
(6) Inclusion of children with
disabilities to ensure access to and full
participation in all opportunities;
(7) Developmentally appropriate,
culturally and linguistically responsive
instruction and evidence-based
curricula, and learning environments
that are aligned with the State early
learning and development standards, for
at least the year prior to kindergarten
entry;
(8) Individualized accommodations
and supports so that all children can
access and participate fully in learning
activities;
(9) Instructional staff salaries that are
comparable to the salaries of local
kindergarten through grade 12 (K–12)
instructional staff;
(10) Program evaluation to ensure
continuous improvement;
(11) On-site or accessible
comprehensive services for children and
community partnerships that promote
families’ access to services that support
their children’s learning and
development; and
(12) Evidence-based health and safety
standards.
Reasons: Strong and consistent
evidence demonstrates that
participation in high-quality early
learning programs can lead to both
short- and long-term positive outcomes
for all children, including improved
school readiness, lower rates of grade
retention and placement in special
education, improved high school
graduation rates, and increased rates of
college attendance and completion.7
Educational improvement strategies
that focus on preschool and the early
grades can address the persistent and
large achievement gaps by race and
income that are evident upon school
entry, and often well-entrenched by
third grade, and that negatively affect
both individual student outcomes in
later grades and overall school
performance.
In ‘‘Investing in our Future: The
Evidence Base on Preschool Education,’’
7 See ‘‘Investing in our Future: The Evidence Base
on Preschool Education’’ (available at https://fcdus.org/sites/default/files/Evidence%20
Base%20on%20Preschool%20Education%20
FINAL.pdf). Society for Research in Child
Development and the Foundation for Child
Development, October 2013.
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53259
published by the Society for Research in
Child Development and the Foundation
for Child Development, a group of
leading researchers contend that the
effects of preschool may be more
sustainable through the implementation
and evaluation of policies that increase
the quality of preschool programs,
facilitate alignment of instructional
practices between preschool and early
elementary school, and enhance the
positive impact that parents have on
their child’s development.8
Traditional early elementary practice
has not evolved as quickly as new
advances in the science of how children
develop and learn have emerged.
Implementing a more comprehensive
and aligned instructional program that
builds on the foundational processes
that underlie children’s learning in the
early years, such as self-regulation,
representation, memory, and
attachment, can build a strong
foundation of learning that will remain
with children throughout their
education and life.
To that end, the Department also
proposes adopting the definition of
‘‘high-quality preschool program’’ used
in the Preschool Development Grants
program. We believe this definition is
appropriate in the SIG program as well
because it includes key elements of a
successful preschool program that will
lead to lasting educational gains.
In addition to the requirements
focused on early learning, the proposed
early learning intervention model
includes a number of strategies that are
aligned with existing transformation
model requirements. This reflects the
Department’s belief, based on
experience thus far with the SIG
program, that the transformation model
requirements provide an appropriate
framework for maximizing the benefits
of high-quality early learning while also
improving student, teacher, and school
performance in the upper grades,
consistent with the SIG program’s
purpose to facilitate successful
turnaround of the entire school.
Modifying the Teacher and Principal
Evaluation and Support System
Requirements Under the Transformation
Model
Current Requirements: Under section
I.A.2(d)(a)(i)(B), an LEA implementing
the transformation model must use an
evaluation system for teachers and
principals that (1) takes into account
data on student growth as a significant
factor as well as other factors and (2) is
designed and developed with teacher
and principal involvement.
8 Ibid.
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Proposed Requirements: Proposed
section I.A.2(d)(1)(A)(ii) revises the
current requirements and would require
an LEA implementing the
transformation model to implement a
teacher and principal evaluation and
support system that meets the
requirements for these systems under
ESEA flexibility. Specifically, under
ESEA flexibility, a teacher and principal
evaluation and support system must be
designed and developed with teacher
and principal involvement and must
also:
(1) Be used for continual
improvement of instruction;
(2) Meaningfully differentiate
performance using at least three
performance levels;
(3) Use multiple valid measures in
determining performance levels,
including as a significant factor data on
student growth for all students
(including English learners and students
with disabilities), and other measures of
professional practice (which may be
gathered through multiple formats and
sources, such as observations based on
rigorous teacher performance standards,
teacher portfolios, and student and
parent surveys);
(4) Evaluate teachers and principals
on a regular basis;
(5) Provide clear, timely, and useful
feedback, including feedback that
identifies needs and guides professional
development; and
(6) Be used to inform personnel
decisions.
The Department also proposes
amending the definition of ‘‘student
growth’’ in section I.A.3 to align it with
the definition under ESEA flexibility,
such that it is defined as the change in
student achievement for an individual
student between two or more points in
time. For the purposes of the proposed
definition of ‘‘student growth,’’ ‘‘student
achievement’’ would mean, (1) for
grades and subjects in which
assessments are required under section
1111(b)(3) of the ESEA, (a) a student’s
score on such assessments and may
include (b) other measures of student
learning, provided they are rigorous and
comparable across schools within an
LEA; and (2) for grades and subjects in
which assessments are not required
under section 1111(b)(3) of the ESEA,
alternative measures of student learning
and performance, such as student
results on pre-tests, end-of-course tests,
and objective performance-based
assessments; student learning
objectives; student performance on
English language proficiency
assessments; and other measures of
student achievement that are rigorous
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and comparable across schools within
an LEA.
The Department also proposes moving
current requirement I.A.2(d)(1)(i)(D)
(requiring an LEA implementing the
transformation model in a school to
provide staff ongoing, high-quality
professional development that is aligned
with the school’s comprehensive
instructional program and designed
with school staff) from the section
regarding developing and increasing
teacher and school leader effectiveness
to the section regarding comprehensive
instruction reform strategies, in
proposed requirement
I.A.(2)(d)(2)(A)(iii).
Reasons: After publishing the current
requirements, the Department
discovered that they erroneously omit
certain requirements from the teacher
and principal evaluation and support
system requirements in section
I.A.2(d)(1)(i)(B). Specifically, the
transformation model requires that an
LEA: (1) Identify and reward school
leaders, teachers, and other staff; (2)
provide staff ongoing high-quality jobembedded professional development;
and (3) implement such strategies as
financial incentives, increased
opportunities for promotion and career
growth, and more flexible work
conditions. The Department intended to
require that the teacher and principal
evaluation and support systems be used
for those three activities but, due to a
numbering error in the current
requirements, did not implement that
requirement.
After the Department published the
current requirements, the Department
established requirements for teacher and
principal evaluation and support
systems implemented by LEAs under
ESEA flexibility. The Department
believes, based on prior SIG and ESEA
flexibility implementation, that highquality teacher and principal evaluation
and support systems that meet those
requirements will provide meaningful
information about the effectiveness of
teachers and principals, can be used to
inform professional development and
improve practice, and will ultimately
increase the quality of instruction for all
students.
The Department proposes aligning the
requirements for teacher and principal
evaluation and support systems under
the SIG transformation model with the
requirements under ESEA flexibility,
including the definition of ‘‘student
growth,’’ for several reasons. First, the
proposed requirement fills the gap
created by the accidental omission in
the current requirements to ensure that
teacher and principal evaluation and
support systems under the
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transformation model are used to inform
personnel decisions and professional
development. Second, it clarifies that
teacher and principal evaluation and
support systems implemented as part of
ESEA flexibility satisfy the requirements
of the SIG transformation model, which
would reduce the burden on LEAs in
SEAs with approved ESEA flexibility
requests because they would not have to
implement separate evaluation systems.
Lastly, the proposal would help to
ensure consistency across Department
programs.
Finally, the Department proposes
moving the professional development
requirement in order to distinguish that
requirement from the requirements that
pertain directly to the teacher and
principal evaluation and support
systems. The proposal to move the
professional development requirement
does not change in any way the
requirement itself.
Eliminating the ‘‘Rule of Nine’’
Current Requirements: Under section
II.A.2(b) of the current requirements, if
an LEA has nine or more Tier I and Tier
II schools, the LEA may not implement
the transformation model in more than
half of those schools (the ‘‘rule of
nine’’).
Proposed Requirements: The
proposed requirements eliminate the
‘‘rule of nine.’’
Reasons: The Department created the
‘‘rule of nine’’ in response to evidence
and data on school improvement
practices under section 1116 of the
ESEA suggesting that turning around
chronically low-performing schools
(those identified for restructuring under
section 1116(b)(8)(B)(v) of the ESEA)
required significant changes in
governance, leadership, and staffing.
Moreover, the data suggested that many
LEAs were reluctant to make such
fundamental, structural changes in their
schools, as demonstrated by the
preference for the ‘‘any other major
restructuring’’ option for schools
identified for restructuring, which,
despite the name, does not actually
require specific changes in school
staffing, structure, or governance. The
‘‘rule of nine’’ also was intended to help
ensure that LEAs applying for SIG funds
selected intervention models for their
eligible Tier I and Tier II schools on the
basis of comprehensive needs analyses
reflecting the unique characteristics and
circumstances of each school, and not
by simply implementing the same
model in all their eligible schools.
The Department is proposing to
eliminate the ‘‘rule of nine’’ for several
reasons. First, with the addition of the
three new interventions in proposed
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sections I.A.2(e)–(g) and the flexibility
for rural LEAs in proposed section I.B.6,
the Department is proposing making the
SIG program more flexible for SEAs and
LEAs. A rule limiting the specific
interventions that an LEA may
implement is inconsistent with that
flexibility. Second, State-reported data
on SIG interventions suggest that the
‘‘rule of nine’’ did not have an impact
on which intervention models most
LEAs with nine or more Tier I and Tier
II schools chose to implement. Third,
drawing on its experience of SIG
implementation since the award of
fiscal year 2009 funds, the Department
believes the most important factors in
selecting an appropriate model for a
SIG-eligible school are the particular
circumstances and needs of the school
and the specific interventions to be
implemented.
For these reasons, and as discussed in
the following section, the Department
proposes requiring an LEA to
demonstrate in its application that the
proposed intervention meets the
specific needs of each school it proposes
to serve with SIG funds.
Adding LEA Requirement To
Demonstrate Appropriateness of Chosen
Intervention Model and Take Into
Consideration Family and Community
Input
Current Requirements: Under section
I.A.4(a)(i) and section II.B.2(b)(ii), an
SEA must consider the extent to which
an LEA’s application demonstrates that
it has taken action or will take action to
analyze the needs of the schools it
applies to serve. Under section
II.A.2(a)(iv), an LEA must address the
extent to which it has taken action or
will take action to analyze the needs of
the schools it applies to serve in its
application to the SEA.
Proposed Requirements: The
Department proposes revising the needs
analysis requirement in section
I.A.4(a)(1) to provide that an SEA must
take into account the extent to which an
LEA (1) includes a demonstration in its
application that the intervention
selected for each eligible school is
designed to meet the specific needs of
the school, based on a needs analysis
that, among other things, analyzes the
school improvement needs identified by
families and the community, and (2)
takes into consideration family and
community input in selecting the
intervention for each school.
Reasons: Although under the current
requirements an LEA is required to
address the needs of its SIG-eligible
schools, there is no requirement that the
LEA demonstrate that the intervention
selected is the most appropriate option
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for meeting the specific needs of the
school. There is also no current
requirement that the needs analysis
must reflect the needs identified based
on family and community input.
Although currently allowable, in order
to ensure that an LEA implements an
appropriate intervention for each school
it proposes to serve with SIG funds and
that input from families and the
community is taken into consideration
when selecting an intervention, the
Department proposes to require the SEA
to consider the extent to which the LEA
has demonstrated that the selected
intervention responds to the particular
circumstances and needs of the school,
taking into consideration family and
community input.
Adding LEA Requirement to
Continuously Engage Families and the
Community Throughout
Implementation
Current Requirements: Although
under section I.A.2(d)(3)(A)(ii) of the
current requirements an LEA
implementing the transformation model
must provide ongoing mechanisms for
family and community engagement, no
similar requirement regarding family
and community engagement applies to
all LEAs that receive SIG funds,
regardless of the intervention model
implemented.
Proposed Requirements: The
Department proposes adding section
I.A.4(a)(8) (Evidence of strongest
commitment), which would require an
SEA to consider the extent to which the
LEA’s application demonstrates how the
LEA will meaningfully engage families
and the community in the
implementation of the intervention on
an ongoing basis.
Reasons: Family and community
engagement in selecting an intervention
is important for ensuring local support
for a successful turnaround, as reflected
in proposed requirement I.A.4(a)(1).
However, ongoing family and
community engagement is also essential
to support student learning and ensure
effective implementation of reform
strategies. Families and community
organizations are key partners in
creating a culture of achievement and
addressing students’ social, emotional,
and health needs.
Adding LEA Requirement to Monitor
and Support Intervention
Implementation
Current Requirements: None.
Proposed Requirements: The
Department proposes adding section
I.A.4(a)(7) (Evidence of strongest
commitment) to require an SEA to
consider the extent to which the LEA’s
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application demonstrates how the LEA
will provide effective oversight and
support for implementation of
interventions in its schools by, for
example, creating an LEA turnaround
office.
Reasons: Through monitoring and
interaction with LEAs and SEAs, the
Department has found that LEA-level
activities and structures are key to
supporting a successful school
turnaround. The proposed requirements
would ensure that LEAs focus on
monitoring and supporting turnaround
efforts in their schools, including
establishing or modifying their
governance structures.
Adding LEA Requirements to Regularly
Review External Providers’ Performance
and Hold External Providers
Accountable
Current Requirements: Under section
I.A.4(a)(iii) and section II.B.2(b)(ii), an
SEA must consider the extent to which
an LEA’s application demonstrates that
an LEA has recruited, screened, and
selected (or will recruit, screen, and
select) external providers, if applicable,
to ensure their quality. Under section
II.A.2(a)(iv), an LEA must address in its
application to the SEA the extent to
which it has recruited, screened, and
selected (or will recruit, screen, and
select) external providers, if applicable,
to ensure their quality. Under section
II.A.9, an LEA that implements a restart
model must hold the charter school
operator, charter management
organization (CMO), or education
management organization (EMO)
accountable for meeting the SIG
requirements.
Proposed Requirements: The
Department proposes several changes to
the provision regarding the recruitment,
screening, and selection of external
providers. Specifically, in proposed
section I.A.4(a)(4) (Evidence of strongest
commitment), in addition to the current
requirement that an SEA consider the
extent to which the LEA’s application
demonstrates that the LEA will recruit,
screen, and select external providers to
ensure their quality, we would require
an SEA to consider the extent to which
the LEA’s application demonstrates that
the LEA will regularly review the
external provider’s performance and
hold the external provider accountable
for its performance. Finally, in proposed
section II.A.9, the Department proposes
requiring an LEA to hold an external
provider accountable for meeting the
SIG requirements, regardless of which
model the LEA is implementing.
Reasons: Although under the current
requirements an SEA must consider the
extent to which the LEA will screen and
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select external providers, there is no
requirement that the SEA consider how
an LEA will review external provider
performance or hold external providers
accountable for their performance. By
requiring that LEAs take a performance
management approach to working with
external providers, the Department is
helping to ensure that providers are
fulfilling the obligations under their
memoranda of understanding (MOUs),
contracts, or other agreements and are
held accountable for contributing to
increased student achievement in
schools that are implementing a SIG
model. The Department expects that, to
meet the proposed requirement, an LEA
will include, in an MOU, contract, or
other agreement with a provider, the
LEA’s expectations for how the provider
will perform and be evaluated
throughout the period of the grant.
Clarifying Rigorous Review Process
Under the Restart Model
Current Requirements: Under section
I.A.2(b), an LEA may use funds to
implement the restart model, under
which the LEA converts a school or
closes and reopens a school under a
charter school operator, a CMO, or an
EMO that has been selected through a
rigorous review process. The current
requirements do not specify the criteria
for such a review, nor do they expressly
establish a role for the SEA in the
review and selection of the restart
partner.
Proposed Requirements: The
Department proposes adding section
I.A.4(a)(11) (Evidence of strongest
commitment), which would require an
SEA to consider the extent to which the
LEA’s application demonstrates that it
will conduct a rigorous review process
in selecting the charter school operator,
CMO, or EMO to operate or manage the
school or schools it proposes to serve
with SIG funds. Under the proposed
requirements in section I.A.2(b)(1), the
rigorous review process must include a
determination by the LEA that the
charter school operator, CMO, or EMO
is likely to produce strong results for the
school. In making that determination,
the LEA must consider the extent to
which the schools currently operated or
managed by the selected charter school
operator, CMO, or EMO, if any, have
produced strong results over the past
three years (or over the life of the school
or schools, if open for fewer than three
years), including—
(1) Significant improvement in
academic achievement for the groups of
students described in section
1111(b)(2)(C)(v) of the ESEA;
(2) Success in closing achievement
gaps, either within schools or relative to
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all public elementary school and
secondary school students statewide, for
all of the groups of students described
in section 1111(b)(2)(C)(v)(II) of the
ESEA;
(3) High school graduation rates,
where applicable, that are above the
average rates in the State for the groups
of students described in section
1111(b)(2)(C)(v) of the ESEA; and
(4) No significant compliance issues,
including in the areas of civil rights,
financial management, and student
safety.
Reasons: The Department believes
that additional safeguards beyond those
in the current requirements are needed
to ensure that LEAs implementing a
restart model do so in a manner that is
likely to result in improved academic
achievement and attainment outcomes
for students. Specifically, we believe
that the recent performance of schools
currently operated or managed by an
LEA’s restart partner is a key predictor
of success that must be considered, as
research indicates that schools opened
by a CMO or EMO typically perform at
a level similar to the average of the other
schools managed by that organization.9
The four factors the Department
proposes requiring an LEA to consider
in determining whether a charter school
operator, CMO, or EMO has produced
strong results are aligned with the
factors that we have used over the last
several years in the definition of ‘‘highquality charter school’’ for the Charter
Schools Program Grants for Replication
and Expansion of High-Quality Charter
Schools. We believe these factors are
appropriate for use in the SIG program
as well because they involve the key
criteria that should be used when
considering the past performance of a
charter school operator, CMO, or EMO
as it pertains to student achievement,
other educational outcomes, and
important areas of compliance.10
We note that the proposed
requirements would not preclude an
LEA from considering other factors in
determining whether an LEA’s selected
charter school operator, CMO, or EMO
is likely to produce strong results for the
school. They also would not prevent an
LEA from selecting a charter school
operator, CMO, or EMO that does not
currently operate or manage any
schools. However, we expect an SEA to
use caution in awarding SIG funds to an
9 Woodworth, J. and Raymond, M. (2013). Charter
School Growth and Replication: Volume II.
Stanford, CA: Center for Research on Education
Outcomes, Stanford University.
10 See the notice of final priorities, requirements,
definitions, and selection criteria for this program,
published in the Federal Register on July 12, 2011
(76 FR 40898).
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LEA that selects an entity that does not
have a record of producing strong
results.
Clarifying Renewal Criteria
Current Requirements: Under section
II.C, an SEA must renew an LEA’s grant
if the LEA demonstrates that its schools
are meeting student achievement goals
in reading/language arts and
mathematics and may renew an LEA’s
grant if the SEA determines that the
LEA’s schools are making progress
toward those goals.
Proposed Requirements: Section II.C.2
of the proposed requirements sets forth
the following two additional factors an
SEA may consider when making grant
renewal decisions for an LEA with SIGfunded schools that have not met
student achievement goals or for which
the SEA does not have sufficient data to
determine whether student achievement
goals have been met: (1) Whether the
LEA’s schools are making progress on
the leading indicators in section III and
(2) whether the LEA is implementing
interventions in its schools with fidelity
to applicable requirements and to its
application. Section II.C.6 of the
proposed requirements also clarifies
that nothing in the requirements would
diminish an SEA’s authority to take
appropriate enforcement action with
respect to an LEA that is not complying
with the terms of its grant.
Reasons: Many SEAs do not have
sufficient data to determine whether an
LEA’s schools have met their student
achievement goals at the time of grant
renewal decisions. To address this
issue, the Department has proposed
additional factors relevant to an LEA’s
performance that the SEA may consider.
These additional criteria would help an
SEA determine whether a school
without achievement data is likely to be
successful in improving student
achievement by the end of its grant
period.
To eliminate any misconception that
the requirements that pertain to grant
renewal might preclude the SEA from
taking appropriate enforcement actions,
the Department has also included
language to clarify that an SEA would
retain its enforcement authority, up to
and including terminating an LEA’s
subgrant.
Defining ‘‘Greatest Need’’ To Include
Priority and Focus Schools for SEAs
With Approved ESEA Flexibility
Requests
Current Requirements: Under section
I.A, an SEA may award SIG funds to
LEAs with the greatest need for such
funds, defined as LEAs that have Tier I,
Tier II, or Tier III schools, as defined in
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the current requirements. The current
requirements do not address schools
identified through an SEA’s approved
ESEA flexibility request as priority or
focus schools.
Proposed Requirements: Section I.A.1
of the proposed requirements revises the
existing definition of ‘‘greatest need’’ to
include, for an SEA with an approved
ESEA flexibility request, priority
schools and focus schools identified
pursuant to the SEA’s approved ESEA
flexibility request and consistent with
the definitions of those schools under
ESEA flexibility.11
The proposed requirements include
conforming references to priority and
focus schools throughout to clarify that
the relevant requirements that pertain to
Tier I and Tier II schools apply to both
priority and focus schools, with the
following exceptions: (1) Proposed
section II.A.4(a) requires an LEA to
serve each priority school unless the
LEA demonstrates it lacks sufficient
11 Under ESEA flexibility, ‘‘priority school’’ is
defined as a school that, based on the most recent
data available, has been identified as among the
lowest-performing schools in the State. The total
number of priority schools in a State must be at
least five percent of the title I schools in the State.
A priority school is—
A school among the lowest five percent of title
I schools in the State based on the achievement of
the ‘‘all students’’ group in terms of proficiency on
the statewide assessments that are part of the SEA’s
differentiated recognition, accountability, and
support system, combined, and has demonstrated a
lack of progress on those assessments over a
number of years in the ‘‘all students’’ group;
A title I-participating or title I-eligible high school
with a graduation rate less than 60 percent over a
number of years; or
A Tier I or Tier II school under the SIG program
that is using SIG funds to implement a school
intervention model.
Under ESEA flexibility, ‘‘focus school’’ is defined
as a title I school in the State that, based on the
most recent data available, is contributing to the
achievement gap in the State. The total number of
focus schools in a State must equal at least 10
percent of the title I schools in the State. A focus
school is—
A school that has the largest within-school gaps
between the highest-achieving subgroup or
subgroups and the lowest-achieving subgroup or
subgroups or, at the high school level, has the
largest within-school gaps in graduation rates; or
A school that has a subgroup or subgroups with
low achievement or, at the high school level, low
graduation rates.
An SEA must also identify as a focus school a
title I high school with a graduation rate less than
60 percent over a number of years that is not
identified as a priority school.
These determinations must be based on the
achievement and lack of progress over a number of
years of one or more subgroups of students
identified under ESEA section 1111(b)(2)(C)(v)(II) in
terms of proficiency on the statewide assessments
that are part of the SEA’s differentiated recognition,
accountability, and support system, combined, or,
at the high school level, graduation rates for one or
more subgroups. See the document ESEA
Flexibility, updated June 7, 2012, available at
https://www2.ed.gov/policy/elsec/guid/eseaflexibility/.
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capacity to do so; (2) proposed section
II.A.7 precludes an LEA with one or
more priority schools from applying to
serve one or more focus schools if it has
not applied to serve all of its priority
schools; and (3) proposed section II.B.7
requires an SEA to give priority to LEAs
that apply to serve priority schools, if
the SEA does not have sufficient SIG
funds to make at least three-year awards
to each LEA that submits an approvable
application.
Reasons: Through waivers granted as
part of ESEA flexibility and through the
State SIG application process, most
SEAs with approved ESEA flexibility
requests have replaced their lists of Tier
I, Tier II, and Tier III schools with lists
of priority schools that were identified
in accordance with their approved
ESEA flexibility requests. These waivers
are necessary because, under ESEA
flexibility, most SEAs no longer make
AYP determinations or identify title I
schools in improvement, corrective
action, or restructuring. Therefore, these
SEAs are unable to identify a sufficient
number of schools that meet the
definitions of Tier I, Tier II, and Tier III
schools. The proposed requirements
would require SEAs with approved
ESEA flexibility requests to award SIG
funds to LEAs with priority and focus
schools instead of Tier I, Tier II, or Tier
III schools and would eliminate the
need for an SEA to seek a waiver from
the Department to serve those schools.
The proposed requirements treat both
priority and focus schools like Tier I
and Tier II schools except that, under
the proposed requirements, an LEA
must apply to serve all of its priority
schools before it may apply to serve its
focus schools and an SEA must award
funds to serve each priority school its
LEAs commit to serve before awarding
funds to LEAs to serve focus schools.
(Under the current requirements, an
SEA must award funds to serve each
Tier I and Tier II school its LEAs
commit to serve before awarding funds
to LEAs to serve Tier III schools.)
Priority schools identified in accordance
with ESEA flexibility are the lowestperforming schools in the State.
Although focus schools identified under
ESEA flexibility are schools
contributing to the achievement gap in
their State, the Department believes that
SIG funds must first be used to
implement intervention models in the
schools that are the lowest-performing
overall.
Clarifying Flexibility for Previously
Implemented Interventions (In Whole or
In Part)
Current Requirements: Under section
I.B.1, an SEA may award SIG funds to
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an LEA that has previously
implemented, in whole or in part, an
intervention that meets the
requirements for the turnaround model,
restart model, or transformation model
within the last two years.
Proposed Requirements: The
proposed requirements revise section
I.B.1 of the current requirements to
make clear that an SEA may fund an
LEA that implemented an intervention,
in whole or in part, during the school
year in which the LEA applies for SIG
funds or during the two school years
prior to the school year in which the
LEA applies for SIG funds.
The proposed requirements also
clarify that the flexibility in section I.B.1
of the current requirements applies to
the three new intervention models
discussed in this document—the
evidence-based, whole-school reform
strategy, the early learning model, and
the approved State-determined model.
Reasons: The reference in the current
requirements to interventions
implemented within ‘‘the last two
years’’ has created confusion among
States. The Department has provided
guidance to States on how to determine
if an intervention that was previously
implemented falls within section I.B.1
of the current requirements.12 The
proposed requirements are consistent
with that guidance. Consistent with the
purpose of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2014, the proposed
requirements would also expand this
flexibility regarding previously
implemented interventions to apply to
the three newly eligible interventions.
Revising Reporting Requirements
Current Requirements: Under section
III, ‘‘Reporting and Evaluation,’’ an SEA
is required to report certain data with
respect to schools served by the SIG
program, including truancy data. For
each metric, the current requirements
identify the authority under which the
Department collects the data. Some of
the data is collected through EDFacts.
However, the current requirements
identify the State Fiscal Stabilization
Fund (SFSF) as the authority for
collecting data for two of the metrics—
college-enrollment rates and
distribution of teachers by performance
level on an LEA’s teacher evaluation
system.
Proposed Requirements: Section III.A
of the proposed requirements would
12 See Frequently Asked Question G–1a in
‘‘Guidance on Fiscal Year 2010 School
Improvement Grants Under Section 1003(g) of the
Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965,’’
dated March 1, 2012, available at
https://www2.ed.gov/programs/sif/
legislation.html.
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make three changes and a number of
clarifications to the reporting
requirements. First, we would remove
from the chart under section III.A.3 of
the proposed requirements the metric
for ‘‘Truants’’ and replace it with
‘‘Chronic absenteeism rates.’’ Second,
we would remove from the chart under
proposed section III.A the references to
SFSF data as a source for collecting
data. Lastly, we would clarify in the
chart under proposed section III.A.3 the
correct source for each of the required
metrics.
Reasons: Truancy is defined at the
State level. As a result, the data the
Department has collected on truancy are
not comparable across States and are of
limited utility. For this reason, the
Department proposes replacing the
truancy data reporting requirement with
a requirement to report data on ‘‘chronic
absenteeism,’’ defined in the
Department’s Civil Rights Data
Collection as the unduplicated number
of students absent 15 or more school
days during the school year. See https://
www.regulations.gov/contentStreamer?
objectId=09000064813
37396&disposition=attachment&content
Type=pdf and https://www2.ed.gov/
about/offices/list/ocr/docs/crdc-201314-p1-p4.doc. This definition of
‘‘chronic absenteeism’’ applies across all
LEAs and would ensure that the data are
consistent among all States. We believe
this approach would more effectively
assist the Department, States, and the
public in determining the impact that
SIG funds have on a key attendance
metric across States. Finally, we would
remove the reference to SFSF as a
source for some of the data because it
is no longer an active program.
Clarifying SEA Requirements for Posting
LEA SIG Applications
Current Requirements: Under section
II.B.3, an SEA must post on its Web site
all final LEA applications and specific
information pertaining to the grants.
Proposed Requirements: Section II.B.6
of the proposed requirements clarifies
that an SEA must post all LEA
applications, including applications to
serve Tier III schools. Additionally, if an
LEA amends an application, the SEA
would be required to post the amended
application.
Reasons: Although the current
requirements state that an SEA must
post ‘‘all final LEA applications,’’ the
Department has found that many SEAs
do not post LEA applications to serve
Tier III schools or amended
applications. The proposed
requirements are intended to eliminate
any confusion and to ensure that SEAs
are providing the public with complete
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information on LEA applications for SIG
funds.
the requirements for internal
consistency.
Removing References to Fiscal Year
2009 and Fiscal Year 2010 Funds
Proposed Requirements
The Secretary proposes the following
requirements, which amend the SIG
final requirements, published in the
Federal Register on October 28, 2010
(75 FR 66363), and incorporate the
proposed changes described above:
Current Requirements: Section II.B
contains multiple requirements
pertaining to the disbursement of fiscal
years 2009 and 2010 funds. Section II.E
allows SEAs to reserve no more than
five percent of their fiscal year 2009 SIG
allocation if the total allocation
exceeded the total allowable amount for
awards to LEAs.
Proposed Requirements: Section II.B
of the proposed requirements would
remove references to fiscal years 2009
and 2010 funds. The proposed
requirements would remove section II.E.
Reasons: The current requirements for
the SIG program were published to
incorporate authority in the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2010,
which was applicable to funds
appropriated under the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009
(ARRA) and fiscal year 2010 funds. The
SIG funds allocated under ARRA were
significantly greater than the fiscal year
2010 allocation and each subsequent
allocation. For that reason, the
Department included specific SEA
requirements to direct the disbursement
of the ARRA funds and the fiscal year
2010 funds, including the current
requirement in section II.E that allowed
SEAs to reserve no more than five
percent of their fiscal year 2009 SIG
allocation if the total allocation
exceeded the total allowable amount for
awards to LEAs. The period of
availability of the ARRA funds and the
fiscal year 2010 funds has expired and,
therefore, references to the fiscal year
2009 and 2010 funds in the current
requirements are no longer necessary.
Removing Reference to Differentiated
Accountability Pilot
Current Requirements: Section II.B.11
sets forth requirements for SEAs
participating in the ‘‘differentiated
accountability pilot.’’
Proposed Requirements: The
proposed requirements would remove
the current requirement pertaining to
the differentiated accountability pilot in
section II.B.11.
Reasons: The ‘‘differentiated
accountability pilot’’ no longer operates.
Accordingly, any reference to it is
obsolete and should be removed.
Technical Edits
The Department has made a number
of technical edits to clarify current
requirements where appropriate. We
have also renumbered the provisions in
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I. SEA Priorities in Awarding School
Improvement Grants
A. Defining key terms. To award
School Improvement Grants to its LEAs,
consistent with section 1003(g)(6) of the
ESEA, an SEA must select those LEAs
with the greatest need for such funds, in
accordance with the requirements in
paragraph I.A.1. From among the LEAs
in greatest need, the SEA must select, in
accordance with paragraph I.A.2, those
LEAs that demonstrate the strongest
commitment to ensuring that the funds
are used to provide adequate resources
to enable the lowest-achieving schools
to improve academic achievement. Key
terms are defined as follows:
1. Greatest need. An LEA with the
greatest need for a School Improvement
Grant must have one or more schools in
at least one of the categories described
in section I.A.1(a)–(c), except that an
LEA with the greatest need for a School
Improvement Grant in a State with an
approved ESEA flexibility request must
have one or more schools in at least one
of the categories described in section
I.A.1(d)–(e):
(a) Tier I schools:
(1) A Tier I school is a title I school
in improvement, corrective action, or
restructuring that is identified by the
SEA under paragraph (a)(1) of the
definition of ‘‘persistently lowestachieving schools.’’
(2) At its option, an SEA may also
identify as a Tier I school an elementary
school that is eligible for title I, Part A
funds that—
(A)(i) Has not made adequate yearly
progress for at least two consecutive
years; or
(ii) Is in the State’s lowest quintile of
performance based on proficiency rates
on the State’s assessments under section
1111(b)(3) of the ESEA in reading/
language arts and mathematics
combined; and
(B) Is no higher achieving than the
highest-achieving school identified by
the SEA under paragraph (a)(1)(A) of the
definition of ‘‘persistently lowestachieving schools.’’
(b) Tier II schools:
(1) A Tier II school is a secondary
school that is eligible for, but does not
receive, title I, Part A funds and is
identified by the SEA under paragraph
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(a)(2) of the definition of ‘‘persistently
lowest-achieving schools.’’
(2) At its option, an SEA may also
identify as a Tier II school a secondary
school that is eligible for title I, Part A
funds that—
(A)(i) Has not made adequate yearly
progress for at least two consecutive
years; or
(ii) Is in the State’s lowest quintile of
performance based on proficiency rates
on the State’s assessments under section
1111(b)(3) of the ESEA in reading/
language arts and mathematics
combined; and
(B)(i) Is no higher achieving than the
highest-achieving school identified by
the SEA under paragraph (a)(2)(A) of the
definition of ‘‘persistently lowestachieving schools’’; or
(ii) Is a high school that has had a
graduation rate as defined in 34 CFR
200.19(b) that is less than 60 percent
over a number of years.
(c) Tier III schools:
(1) A Tier III school is a title I school
in improvement, corrective action, or
restructuring that is not a Tier I or a Tier
II school.
(2) At its option, an SEA may also
identify as a Tier III school a school that
is eligible for title I, Part A funds that—
(A)(i) Has not made adequate yearly
progress for at least two years; or
(ii) Is in the State’s lowest quintile of
performance based on proficiency rates
on the State’s assessments under section
1111(b)(3) of the ESEA in reading/
language arts and mathematics
combined; and
(B) Does not meet the requirements to
be a Tier I or Tier II school.
(3) An SEA may establish additional
criteria to use in setting priorities among
LEA applications for funding and to
encourage LEAs to differentiate among
Tier III schools in their use of School
Improvement Grants funds.
(d) Priority schools: A priority school
is a school identified as a priority school
pursuant to an SEA’s approved ESEA
flexibility request and consistent with
the ESEA flexibility definition of
priority school.13
13 A ‘‘priority school’’ is defined as a school that,
based on the most recent data available, has been
identified as among the lowest-performing schools
in the State. The total number of priority schools
in a State must be at least five percent of the title
I schools in the State. A priority school is—
A school among the lowest five percent of title
I schools in the State based on the achievement of
the ‘‘all students’’ group in terms of proficiency on
the statewide assessments that are part of the SEA’s
differentiated recognition, accountability, and
support system, combined, and has demonstrated a
lack of progress on those assessments over a
number of years in the ‘‘all students’’ group;
A title I-participating or title I-eligible high school
with a graduation rate less than 60 percent over a
number of years; or
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(e) Focus schools: A focus school is a
school identified as a focus school
pursuant to an SEA’s approved ESEA
flexibility request and consistent with
the ESEA flexibility definition of focus
school.14
2. Strongest Commitment. An LEA
with the strongest commitment is an
LEA that agrees to implement, and
demonstrates the capacity to implement
fully and effectively, one of the
following rigorous interventions in each
Tier I and Tier II school or, for an SEA
with an approved ESEA flexibility
request, each priority and focus school,
that the LEA commits to serve:
(a) Turnaround model:
(1) A turnaround model is one in
which an LEA must implement each of
the following elements:
(A) Replace the principal and grant
the principal sufficient operational
flexibility (including in staffing,
calendars/time, and budgeting) to
implement fully each element of the
turnaround model.
(B) Using locally adopted
competencies to measure the
effectiveness of staff who can work
within the turnaround environment to
meet the needs of students—
(i) Screen all existing staff and rehire
no more than 50 percent; and
(ii) Select new staff.
(C) Implement such strategies as
financial incentives, increased
opportunities for promotion and career
growth, and more flexible work
conditions that are designed to recruit,
place, and retain staff with the skills
necessary to meet the needs of the
students in the turnaround school.
(D) Provide staff ongoing, highquality, job-embedded professional
A Tier I or Tier II school under the SIG program
that is using SIG funds to implement a school
intervention model.
14 A ‘‘focus school’’ is defined as a title I school
in the State that, based on the most recent data
available, is contributing to the achievement gap in
the State. The total number of focus schools in a
State must equal at least 10 percent of the title I
schools in the State. A focus school is—
A school that has the largest within-school gaps
between the highest-achieving subgroup or
subgroups and the lowest-achieving subgroup or
subgroups or, at the high school level, has the
largest within-school gaps in graduation rates; or
A school that has a subgroup or subgroups with
low achievement or, at the high school level, low
graduation rates.
An SEA must also identify as a focus school a
title I high school with a graduation rate less than
60 percent over a number of years that is not
identified as a priority school.
These determinations must be based on the
achievement and lack of progress over a number of
years of one or more subgroups of students
identified under ESEA section 1111(b)(2)(C)(v)(II) in
terms of proficiency on the statewide assessments
that are part of the SEA’s differentiated recognition,
accountability, and support system, combined, or,
at the high school level, graduation rates for one or
more subgroups.
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development that is aligned with the
school’s comprehensive instructional
program and designed with school staff
to ensure that they are equipped to
facilitate effective teaching and learning
and have the capacity to successfully
implement school reform strategies.
(E) Adopt a new governance structure,
which may include, but is not limited
to, requiring the school to report to a
new ‘‘turnaround office’’ in the LEA or
SEA, hire a ‘‘turnaround leader’’ who
reports directly to the Superintendent or
Chief Academic Officer, or enter into a
multi-year contract with the LEA or SEA
to obtain added flexibility in exchange
for greater accountability.
(F) Use data to identify and
implement an instructional program
that is research-based and vertically
aligned from one grade to the next as
well as aligned with State academic
standards.
(G) Promote the continuous use of
student data (such as from formative,
interim, and summative assessments) to
inform and differentiate instruction in
order to meet the academic needs of
individual students.
(H) Establish schedules and
implement strategies that provide
increased learning time (as defined in
these requirements).
(I) Provide appropriate socialemotional and community-oriented
services and supports for students.
(2) A turnaround model may also
implement other strategies such as—
(A) Any of the required and
permissible activities under the
transformation model; or
(B) A new school model (e.g., themed,
dual language academy).
(b) Restart model:
(1) A restart model is one in which an
LEA converts a school or closes and
reopens a school under a charter school
operator, a charter management
organization (CMO), or an education
management organization (EMO) that
has been selected through a rigorous
review process. (A CMO is a non-profit
organization that operates or manages
charter schools by centralizing or
sharing certain functions and resources
among schools. An EMO is a for-profit
or non-profit organization that provides
‘‘whole-school operation’’ services to an
LEA.) The rigorous review process must
include a determination by the LEA that
the selected charter school operator,
CMO, or EMO is likely to produce
strong results for the school. In making
this determination, the LEA must
consider the extent to which the schools
currently operated or managed by the
selected charter school operator, CMO,
or EMO, if any, have produced strong
results over the past three years (or over
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the life of the school, if the school has
been open for fewer than three years),
including—
(A) Significant improvement in
academic achievement for all of the
groups of students described in section
1111(b)(2)(C)(v) of the ESEA;
(B) Success in closing achievement
gaps, either within schools or relative to
all public elementary school and
secondary school students statewide, for
all of the groups of students described
in section 1111(b)(2)(C)(v)(II) of the
ESEA;
(C) High school graduation rates,
where applicable, that are above the
average rates in the State for the groups
of students described in section
1111(b)(2)(C)(v) of the ESEA; and
(D) No significant compliance issues,
including in the areas of civil rights,
financial management, and student
safety;
(2) A restart model must enroll,
within the grades it serves, any former
student who wishes to attend the
school.
(c) School closure: School closure
occurs when an LEA closes a school and
enrolls the students who attended that
school in other schools in the LEA that
are higher achieving. These other
schools should be within reasonable
proximity to the closed school and may
include, but are not limited to, charter
schools or new schools for which
achievement data are not yet available.
(d) Transformation model: A
transformation model is one in which
an LEA implements each of the
following elements:
(1) Developing and increasing teacher
and school leader effectiveness.
(A) Required activities. The LEA
must—
(i) Replace the principal who led the
school prior to commencement of the
transformation model;
(ii) Implement rigorous, transparent,
and equitable evaluation and support
systems for teachers and principals,
designed and developed with teacher
and principal involvement, that—
(1) Will be used for continual
improvement of instruction;
(2) Meaningfully differentiate
performance using at least three
performance levels;
(3) Use multiple valid measures in
determining performance levels,
including as a significant factor data on
student growth (as defined in these
requirements) for all students (including
English learners and students with
disabilities), and other measures of
professional practice (which may be
gathered through multiple formats and
sources), such as observations based on
rigorous teacher performance standards,
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teacher portfolios, and student and
parent surveys;
(4) Evaluate teachers and principals
on a regular basis;
(5) Provide clear, timely, and useful
feedback, including feedback that
identifies needs and guides professional
development; and
(6) Will be used to inform personnel
decisions.
(iii) Use the teacher and principal
evaluation and support system
described in section I.A.2(d)(1)(A)(ii) of
these requirements to identify and
reward school leaders, teachers, and
other staff who, in implementing this
model, have increased student
achievement and high school graduation
rates and identify and remove those
who, after ample opportunities have
been provided for them to improve their
professional practice, have not done so;
and
(iv) Implement such strategies as
financial incentives, increased
opportunities for promotion and career
growth, and more flexible work
conditions that are designed to recruit,
place, and retain staff with the skills
necessary to meet the needs of students
in the school, taking into consideration
the results from the teacher and
principal evaluation and support system
described in section I.A.2(d)(1)(A)(ii) of
these requirements, if applicable.
(B) Permissible activities. An LEA
may also implement other strategies to
develop teachers’ and school leaders’
effectiveness, such as—
(i) Providing additional compensation
to attract and retain staff with the skills
necessary to meet the needs of the
students in a transformation school;
(ii) Instituting a system for measuring
changes in instructional practices
resulting from professional
development; or
(iii) Ensuring that the school is not
required to accept a teacher without the
mutual consent of the teacher and
principal, regardless of the teacher’s
seniority.
(2) Comprehensive instructional
reform strategies.
(A) Required activities. The LEA
must—
(i) Use data to identify and implement
an instructional program that is
research-based and vertically aligned
from one grade to the next as well as
aligned with State academic standards;
(ii) Promote the continuous use of
student data (such as from formative,
interim, and summative assessments) to
inform and differentiate instruction in
order to meet the academic needs of
individual students; and
(iii) Provide staff ongoing, highquality, job-embedded professional
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development (e.g., regarding subjectspecific pedagogy, instruction that
reflects a deeper understanding of the
community served by the school, or
differentiated instruction) that is aligned
with the school’s comprehensive
instructional program and designed
with school staff to ensure they are
equipped to facilitate effective teaching
and learning and have the capacity to
implement successfully school reform
strategies.
(B) Permissible activities. An LEA
may also implement comprehensive
instructional reform strategies, such
as—
(i) Conducting periodic reviews to
ensure that the instruction is
implemented with fidelity to the
selected curriculum, is having the
intended impact on student
achievement, and is modified if
ineffective;
(ii) Implementing a schoolwide
‘‘response-to-intervention’’ model;
(iii) Providing additional supports
and professional development to
teachers and principals in order to
implement effective strategies to
support students with disabilities in the
least restrictive environment and to
ensure that English learners acquire
language skills to master academic
content;
(iv) Using and integrating technologybased supports and interventions as part
of the instructional program; and
(v) In secondary schools—
(1) Increasing rigor by offering
opportunities for students to enroll in
advanced coursework (such as
Advanced Placement; International
Baccalaureate; or science, technology,
engineering, and mathematics courses,
especially those that incorporate
rigorous and relevant project-,
inquiry-, or design-based contextual
learning opportunities), early-college
high schools, dual enrollment programs,
or thematic learning academies that
prepare students for college and careers,
including by providing appropriate
supports designed to ensure that lowachieving students can take advantage
of these programs and coursework;
(2) Improving student transition from
middle to high school through summer
transition programs or freshman
academies;
(3) Increasing graduation rates
through, for example, credit-recovery
programs, re-engagement strategies,
smaller learning communities,
competency-based instruction and
performance-based assessments, and
acceleration of basic reading and
mathematics skills; or
(4) Establishing early-warning systems
to identify students who may be at risk
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of failing to achieve to high standards or
graduate.
(3) Increasing learning time and
creating community-oriented schools.
(A) Required activities. The LEA
must—
(i) Establish schedules and strategies
that provide increased learning time (as
defined in these requirements); and
(ii) Provide ongoing mechanisms for
family and community engagement.
(B) Permissible activities. An LEA
may also implement other strategies that
extend learning time and create
community-oriented schools, such as—
(i) Partnering with parents and parent
organizations, faith- and communitybased organizations, health clinics,
other State or local agencies, and others
to create safe school environments that
meet students’ social, emotional, and
health needs;
(ii) Extending or restructuring the
school day so as to add time for such
strategies as advisory periods that build
relationships between students, faculty,
and other school staff;
(iii) Implementing approaches to
improve school climate and discipline,
such as implementing a system of
positive behavioral supports or taking
steps to eliminate bullying and student
harassment; or
(iv) Expanding the school program to
offer full-day kindergarten or prekindergarten.
(4) Providing operational flexibility
and sustained support.
(A) Required activities. The LEA
must—
(i) Give the school sufficient
operational flexibility (such as staffing,
calendars/time, and budgeting) to
implement fully each element of the
transformation model to substantially
improve student achievement outcomes
and increase high school graduation
rates; and
(ii) Ensure that the school receives
ongoing, intensive technical assistance
and related support from the LEA, the
SEA, or a designated external lead
partner organization (such as a school
turnaround organization or an EMO).
(B) Permissible activities. The LEA
may also implement other strategies for
providing operational flexibility and
intensive support, such as—
(i) Allowing the school to be run
under a new governance arrangement,
such as a turnaround division within
the LEA or SEA; or
(ii) Implementing a per-pupil, schoolbased budget formula that is weighted
based on student needs.
(e) Evidence-based, whole-school
reform strategy: An evidence-based,
whole-school reform strategy is a
strategy that—
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(1) Is supported by evidence of
effectiveness, which must include at
least two studies of the strategy, each of
which—
(A) Meets What Works Clearinghouse
evidence standards with or without
reservations;15 and
(B) Found a statistically significant
favorable impact on a student academic
achievement or attainment outcome,
with no statistically significant and
overriding unfavorable impacts on that
outcome for relevant populations in the
study or in other studies of the
intervention reviewed by and reported
on by the What Works Clearinghouse;
(2) Is a whole-school reform strategy
as defined in these requirements; and
(3) Is implemented by the LEA in
partnership with a strategy developer as
defined in these requirements.
(f) Early learning model: An LEA
implementing the early learning model
in an elementary school must—
(1) Implement each of the following
early learning strategies—
(A) Offer full-day kindergarten;
(B) Establish or expand a high-quality
preschool program (as defined in these
requirements);
(C) Provide educators, including
preschool teachers, with time for joint
planning across grades to facilitate
effective teaching and learning and
positive teacher-student interactions.
(2) Replace the principal who led the
school prior to commencement of the
early learning model;
(3) Implement rigorous, transparent,
and equitable evaluation and support
systems for teachers and principals,
designed and developed with teacher
and principal involvement, that meet
the requirements described in section
I.A.2(d)(1)(A)(ii);
(4) Use the teacher and principal
evaluation and support system
described in section I.A.2(d)(1)(A)(ii) of
these requirements to identify and
reward school leaders, teachers, and
other staff who, in implementing this
model, have increased student
achievement and identify and remove
those who, after ample opportunities
have been provided for them to improve
their professional practice, have not
done so;
(5) Implement such strategies as
financial incentives, increased
opportunities for promotion and career
growth, and more flexible work
conditions that are designed to recruit,
place, and retain staff with the skills
necessary to meet the needs of students
15 What Works Clearinghouse Procedures and
Standards Handbook (Version 3.0), which can
currently be found at the following link: https://
ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/pdf/reference_resources/wwc_
procedures_v3_0_standards_handbook.pdf.
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in the school, taking into consideration
the results from the teacher and
principal evaluation and support system
described in section I.A.2(d)(1)(A)(ii) of
these requirements, if applicable;
(6) Use data to identify and
implement an instructional program
that—
(A) Is research-based,
developmentally appropriate, and
vertically aligned from one grade to the
next as well as aligned with State early
learning and development standards
and State academic standards and
(B) In the early grades, promotes the
full range of academic content across
domains of development, including
math and science, language and literacy,
socio-emotional skills, self-regulation,
and executive functions;
(7) Promote the continuous use of
student data (such as from formative,
interim, and summative assessments) to
inform and differentiate instruction in
order to meet the educational and
developmental needs of individual
students; and
(8) Provide staff ongoing, high-quality,
job-embedded professional development
such as coaching and mentoring (e.g.,
regarding subject-specific pedagogy,
instruction that reflects a deeper
understanding of the community served
by the school, or differentiated
instruction) that is aligned with the
school’s comprehensive instructional
program and designed with school staff
to ensure they are equipped to facilitate
effective teaching and learning and have
the capacity to implement successfully
school reform strategies.
(g) Approved State-Determined
Model: An LEA may implement an
intervention developed or adopted by
its SEA that has been approved by the
Secretary, consistent with section
II.B.1(b).
3. Definitions.
High-quality preschool program
means an early learning program that
includes structural elements that are
evidence-based and nationally
recognized as important for ensuring
program quality, including at a
minimum—
(a) High staff qualifications, including
a teacher with a bachelor’s degree in
early childhood education or a
bachelor’s degree in any field with a
State-approved alternate pathway,
which may include coursework, clinical
practice, and evidence of knowledge of
content and pedagogy relating to early
childhood, and teaching assistants with
appropriate credentials;
(b) High-quality professional
development for all staff;
(c) A child-to-instructional staff ratio
of no more than 10 to 1;
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(d) A class size of no more than 20
with, at a minimum, one teacher with
high staff qualifications as outlined in
paragraph (a) of this definition;
(e) A full-day program;
(f) Inclusion of children with
disabilities to ensure access to and full
participation in all opportunities;
(g) Developmentally appropriate,
culturally and linguistically responsive
instruction and evidence-based
curricula, and learning environments
that are aligned with the State early
learning and development standards, for
at least the year prior to kindergarten
entry;
(h) Individualized accommodations
and supports so that all children can
access and participate fully in learning
activities;
(i) Instructional staff salaries that are
comparable to the salaries of local K–12
instructional staff;
(j) Program evaluation to ensure
continuous improvement;
(k) On-site or accessible
comprehensive services for children and
community partnerships that promote
families’ access to services that support
their children’s learning and
development; and
(l) Evidence-based health and safety
standards.
Increased learning time means using
a longer school day, week, or year
schedule to significantly increase the
total number of school hours to include
additional time for—
(a) Instruction in one or more core
academic subjects, including English,
reading or language arts, mathematics,
science, foreign languages, civics and
government, economics, arts, history,
and geography;
(b) Instruction in other subjects and
enrichment activities that contribute to
a well-rounded education, including, for
example, physical education, service
learning, and experiential and workbased learning opportunities that are
provided by partnering, as appropriate,
with other organizations; and
(c) Teachers to collaborate, plan, and
engage in professional development
within and across grades and subjects.16
Persistently lowest-achieving schools
means, as determined by the State—
(a)(1) Any title I school in
improvement, corrective action, or
restructuring that—
16 Evidence from the field shows that increasing
learning time in a strategic, high-quality manner is
often a key element of successful school
turnaround. See ‘‘The Case for Improving and
Expanding Time in School: A Review of Key
Research and Practice, available at
www.timeandlearning.org/files/CaseforMoreTime_
1.pdf.’’ National Center on Time and Learning,
April 2012.
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(A) Is among the lowest-achieving five
percent of title I schools in
improvement, corrective action, or
restructuring or the lowest-achieving
five title I schools in improvement,
corrective action, or restructuring in the
State, whichever number of schools is
greater; or
(B) Is a high school that has had a
graduation rate as defined in 34 CFR
200.19(b) that is less than 60 percent
over a number of years; and
(2) Any secondary school that is
eligible for, but does not receive, title I
funds that—
(A) Is among the lowest-achieving five
percent of secondary schools or the
lowest-achieving five secondary schools
in the State that are eligible for, but do
not receive, title I funds, whichever
number of schools is greater; or
(B) Is a high school that has had a
graduation rate as defined in 34 CFR
200.19(b) that is less than 60 percent
over a number of years.
(b) To identify the lowest-achieving
schools, a State must take into account
both—
(1) The academic achievement of the
‘‘all students’’ group in a school in
terms of proficiency on the State’s
assessments under section 1111(b)(3) of
the ESEA in reading/language arts and
mathematics combined; and
(2) The school’s lack of progress on
those assessments over a number of
years for the ‘‘all students’’ group.
Strategy developer means an entity or
individual that—
(a) Maintains proprietary rights for the
strategy; or
(b) If no entity or individual
maintains proprietary rights for the
strategy—
(1) Has a demonstrated record of
success in implementing the strategy in
one or more low-achieving schools; or
(2) Together with the LEA with which
the entity or individual has partnered,
has a high-quality plan for
implementing the strategy in the school.
Student growth means the change in
student achievement for an individual
student between two or more points in
time. For the purpose of this definition,
student achievement means—
(a) For grades and subjects in which
assessments are required under section
1111(b)(3) of the ESEA, a student’s score
on such assessments and may include
other measures of student learning, such
as those described in paragraph (b) of
this definition, provided they are
rigorous and comparable across schools
within an LEA.
(b) For grades and subjects in which
assessments are not required under
section 1111(b)(3) of the ESEA,
alternative measures of student learning
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and performance, such as student
results on pre-tests, end-of-course tests,
and objective performance-based
assessments; student learning
objectives; student performance on
English language proficiency
assessments; and other measures of
student achievement that are rigorous
and comparable across schools within
an LEA.
Whole-school reform strategy means a
strategy that is designed to—
(a) Improve student academic
achievement or attainment;
(b) Be implemented for all students in
a school; and
(c) Address, at a minimum and in a
comprehensive and coordinated
manner, each of the following:
(1) School leadership.
(2) Teaching and learning in at least
one full academic content area
(including professional learning for
educators).
(3) Student non-academic support.
(4) Family and community
engagement.
4. Evidence of strongest commitment.
(a) In determining the strength of an
LEA’s commitment to ensuring that
School Improvement Grants funds are
used to provide adequate resources to
enable Tier I, Tier II, priority, and focus
schools to improve student achievement
substantially, an SEA must consider, at
a minimum, the extent to which the
LEA’s application demonstrates that the
LEA has taken, or will take, action to—
(1) In selecting the intervention for
each eligible school—
(A) Ensure that the selected
intervention is designed to meet the
specific needs of the school, based on a
needs analysis that, among other things,
analyzes the needs identified by
families and the community; and
(B) Take into consideration family
and community input.
(2) Design and implement
interventions consistent with these
requirements;
(3) Use the School Improvement
Grants funds to provide adequate
resources and related support to each
school it commits to serve in order to
implement fully and effectively the
selected intervention on the first day of
the first school year of full
implementation;
(4) Recruit, screen, and select external
providers, if applicable, to ensure their
quality, and regularly review and hold
accountable such providers for their
performance;
(5) Align other resources with the
selected intervention;
(6) Modify its practices or policies, if
necessary, to enable it to implement the
selected intervention fully and
effectively;
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(7) Provide effective oversight and
support for implementation of the
selected intervention for each school it
proposes to serve, such as by creating an
LEA turnaround office;
(8) Meaningfully engage families and
the community in the implementation
of the selected intervention on an
ongoing basis;
(9) For an LEA eligible for services
under subpart 1 or 2 of part B of title
VI of the ESEA that chooses to modify
one element of the turnaround or
transformation model under section
I.B.6 of these requirements, meet the
intent and purpose of that element;
(10) For an LEA that applies to
implement an evidence-based, wholeschool reform strategy in one or more
eligible schools—
(A) Implement a strategy with
evidence of effectiveness that includes a
sample population or setting similar to
the population or setting of the school
to be served; and
(B) Partner with a strategy developer,
as defined in these requirements;
(11) For an LEA that applies to
implement the restart model in one or
more eligible schools, conduct a
rigorous review process, as described in
section I.A.2(b), of the charter school
operator, CMO, or EMO that it has
selected to operate or manage the school
or schools; and
(12) Sustain the reforms after the
funding period ends.
(b) The SEA must consider the LEA’s
capacity to implement the interventions
and may approve the LEA to serve only
those Tier I, Tier II, priority, and focus
schools for which the SEA determines
that the LEA can implement fully and
effectively one of the interventions.
B. Providing flexibility.
1. An SEA may award School
Improvement Grants funds to an LEA
for a Tier I, Tier II, priority, or focus
school that has implemented, in whole
or in part, an intervention that meets the
requirements under section I.A.2(a),
2(b), 2(d), 2(e), 2(f), or 2(g) of these
requirements during the school year in
which the LEA applies for School
Improvement Grants funds or during the
two school years prior to the school year
in which the LEA applies for School
Improvement Grants funds, so that the
LEA and school can continue or
complete the intervention being
implemented in that school.
2. An SEA may seek a waiver from the
Secretary of the requirements in section
1116(b) of the ESEA in order to permit
a Tier I or Tier II title I participating
school implementing an intervention
that meets the requirements under
section I.A.2(a) or 2(b) of these
requirements in an LEA that receives a
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School Improvement Grant to ‘‘start
over’’ in the school improvement
timeline. Even though a school
implementing the waiver would no
longer be in improvement, corrective
action, or restructuring, it may receive
School Improvement Grants funds.
3. An SEA may seek a waiver from the
Secretary to enable a Tier I or Tier II
title I participating school that is
ineligible to operate a title I schoolwide
program and is operating a title I
targeted assistance program to operate a
schoolwide program in order to
implement an intervention that meets
the requirements under section I.A.2(a),
2(b), 2(d), 2(e), 2(f), or 2(g) of these
requirements.
4. An SEA may seek a waiver from the
Secretary to extend the period of
availability of School Improvement
Grants funds so as to make those funds
available to the SEA and its LEAs for up
to five years.
5. If an SEA does not seek a waiver
under section I.B.2, 3, or 4, an LEA may
seek a waiver.
6. An LEA eligible for services under
subpart 1 or 2 of part B of title VI of the
ESEA may modify one element of the
turnaround or transformation model so
long as the modification meets the
intent and purpose of the original
element, in accordance with section
I.A.4(a)(9) of these requirements.
II. Awarding School Improvement
Grants to LEAs
A. LEA requirements.
1. An LEA may apply for a School
Improvement Grant if it receives title I,
Part A funds and has one or more
schools that qualify under the State’s
definition of a Tier I, Tier II, Tier III,
priority, or focus school.
2. In its application, in addition to
other information that the SEA may
require, the LEA must—
(a) Identify the schools it commits to
serve;
(b) Identify the intervention it will
implement in each Tier I, Tier II,
priority, and focus school it commits to
serve;
(c) Provide evidence of its strong
commitment to use School
Improvement Grants funds to
implement the selected intervention by
addressing the factors in section I.A.4(a)
of these requirements;
(d) Include a timeline delineating the
steps the LEA will take to implement
the selected intervention in each school
identified in the LEA’s application; and
(e) Include a budget indicating how it
will allocate School Improvement
Grants funds among the schools it
commits to serve that is of sufficient
size and scope and that:
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(1) For each Tier I, Tier II, priority,
and focus school the LEA commits to
serve, ensures that the LEA can
implement one of the interventions
identified in sections I.A.2(a)-(b) or
sections I.A.2(d)-(g) of these
requirements for a minimum of three
years and no more than five years; and
(2) For each Tier III school the LEA
commits to serve, includes the services
it will provide the school, particularly if
the school meets additional criteria
established by the SEA, for a minimum
of three years and no more than five
years.
3. An LEA that intends to use the first
year of its School Improvement Grants
award for planning and other preimplementation activities for an eligible
school must include in its application to
the SEA a description of the activities,
the timeline for implementing those
activities, and a description of how
those activities will lead to successful
implementation of the selected
intervention.
4. The LEA must serve:
(a) In an SEA with an approved ESEA
flexibility request, each priority school
unless the LEA demonstrates that it
lacks sufficient capacity to undertake
one of the interventions described in
section I.A.2 of these requirements in
each priority school, in which case the
LEA must indicate the priority schools
that it can effectively serve. An LEA
may not serve with School Improvement
Grants funds awarded under section
1003(g) of the ESEA a priority or focus
school in which it does not implement
one of the interventions identified in
section I.A.2 of these requirements.
(b) In all other SEAs, each Tier I
school unless the LEA demonstrates that
it lacks sufficient capacity (which may
be due, in part, to serving Tier II
schools) to undertake one of the
interventions described in section I.A.2
of these requirements in each Tier I
school, in which case the LEA must
indicate the Tier I schools that it can
effectively serve. An LEA may not serve
with School Improvement Grants funds
awarded under section 1003(g) of the
ESEA a Tier I or Tier II school in which
it does not implement one of the
interventions identified in section I.A.2
of these requirements.
5. An LEA that commits to serve
schools that do not receive title I, Part
A funds must ensure that each such
school it serves receives all of the State
and local funds it would have received
in the absence of the School
Improvement Grants funds.
6. An LEA in which one or more Tier
I schools are located and that does not
apply to serve at least one of these
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schools may not apply for a grant to
serve only Tier III schools.
7. An LEA in which one or more
priority schools are located and that
does not apply to serve all of these
schools may not apply for a grant to
serve one or more focus schools.
8. (a) To monitor each Tier I, Tier II,
priority, and focus school that receives
School Improvement Grants funds, an
LEA must—
(1) Establish annual goals for student
achievement on the State’s assessments
in both reading/language arts and
mathematics; and
(2) Measure progress on the leading
indicators in section III of these
requirements.
(b) The LEA must also meet the
requirements with respect to adequate
yearly progress in section 1111(b)(2) of
the ESEA, if applicable.
9. An LEA must hold the charter
school operator, CMO, EMO, or other
external provider accountable for
meeting these requirements, if
applicable.
B. SEA requirements.
1. (a) To receive a School
Improvement Grant, an SEA must
submit an application to the Department
at such time, and containing such
information, as the Secretary shall
reasonably require.
(b) In its application to the
Department, each SEA may submit one
State-determined intervention model for
the Secretary’s review and approval. To
be approved, a State-determined
intervention model must:
(1) Ensure strong leadership by:
(A) Requiring a review of the
performance of the current principal;
(B) Requiring replacement of the
principal, if such a change is necessary
to ensure strong and effective
leadership, or requiring the LEA to
demonstrate to the SEA that the current
principal has a track record in
improving achievement and has the
ability to lead the turnaround effort; and
(C) Requiring the LEA to provide the
principal with operational flexibility in
the areas of scheduling, staff,
curriculum, and budget;
(2) Ensure that teachers are effective
and able to improve instruction by:
(A) Requiring a review of all staff and
retaining only those who are determined
to be effective and to have the ability to
be successful in supporting the
turnaround effort;
(B) Preventing ineffective teachers
from transferring to a school
implementing an intervention under
section I.A.2; and
(C) Providing job-embedded, ongoing
professional development informed by
the teacher evaluation and support
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systems and tied to teacher and student
needs;
(3) Establish schedules and
implement strategies that provide
increased learning time (as defined in
these requirements);
(4) Strengthen the school’s
instructional program by ensuring that
it—
(A) Is research-based, rigorous, and
aligned with State academic content
standards; and
(B) Meets student needs;
(5) Use data to inform instruction and
for continuous improvement, including
by providing time for collaboration on
the use of data;
(6) Establish a school environment
that improves school safety and
discipline and addresses other nonacademic factors that impact student
achievement, such as students’ social,
emotional, and health needs; and
(7) Provide ongoing mechanisms for
family and community engagement.
Note: An intervention that the Secretary
approved as part of an SEA’s ESEA flexibility
request that also includes increased learning
time, as defined in these requirements, will
be considered to have met the criteria in
II.B.1(b).
2. (a) An SEA must review and
approve, consistent with these
requirements, an application for a
School Improvement Grant that it
receives from an LEA.
(b) Before approving an LEA’s
application, the SEA must ensure that
the application meets these
requirements, particularly with respect
to—
(1) Whether the LEA has agreed to
implement one of the interventions
identified in section I.A.2 of these
requirements in each Tier I and Tier II
school or, for an SEA with an approved
ESEA flexibility request, each priority
and focus school included in its
application;
(2) The extent to which the LEA’s
application demonstrates the LEA’s
strong commitment to use School
Improvement Grants funds to
implement the selected intervention by
addressing the factors in section I.A.4 of
these requirements;
(3) Whether the LEA has the capacity
to implement the selected intervention
fully and effectively in each school
identified in its application; and
(4) Whether the LEA has submitted a
budget that includes sufficient funds to
implement the selected intervention
fully and effectively in each school it
identifies in its application.
3. An SEA may, consistent with State
law, take over an LEA or specific Tier
I, Tier II, priority, or focus schools in
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order to implement the interventions in
these requirements.
4. An SEA may not require an LEA to
implement a particular intervention in
one or more schools unless the SEA has
taken over the LEA or school.
5. To the extent that a school
implementing a restart model becomes a
charter school LEA, an SEA must hold
the charter school LEA accountable, or
ensure that the charter school authorizer
holds it accountable, for complying with
these requirements.
6. An SEA must post on its Web site,
within 30 days of awarding School
Improvement Grants to LEAs and within
30 days of approving any amendments
to LEA applications, all approved LEA
applications (including applications to
serve Tier I, Tier II, Tier III, priority, and
focus schools and approved
amendments) as well as a summary of
those grants that includes the following
information:
(a) Name and National Center for
Education Statistics (NCES)
identification number of each LEA
awarded a grant.
(b) Amount of each LEA’s grant.
(c) Name and NCES identification
number of each school to be served.
(d) Type of intervention to be
implemented in each Tier I, Tier II,
priority, and focus school.
7. If an SEA does not have sufficient
School Improvement Grants funds to
award, for at least three years, a grant to
each LEA that submits an approvable
application, the SEA must give priority
to LEAs to serve Tier I or Tier II schools
or, for an SEA with an approved ESEA
flexibility request, the SEA must give
priority to LEAs to serve priority
schools.
8. An SEA must award a School
Improvement Grant to an LEA in an
amount that is of sufficient size and
scope to support the activities required
under section 1116 of the ESEA and
these requirements. The LEA’s total
grant may not be less than $50,000 for
each school it commits to serve and, for
each school in which the LEA commits
to fully implement an intervention that
meets the requirements under section
I.A.2(a), 2(b), 2(d), 2(e), 2(f), or 2(g) of
these requirements, may be up to
$2,000,000 per year.
9. If an SEA does not have sufficient
School Improvement Grants funds to
allocate to each LEA with a Tier I or
Tier II school or, in an SEA with an
approved ESEA flexibility request, to
each LEA with a priority or focus
school, an amount sufficient to enable
the school to implement fully and
effectively the specified intervention
throughout the period of availability,
including any extension afforded
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through a waiver, the SEA may take into
account the distribution of Tier I, Tier
II, priority, and focus schools among
such LEAs in the State to ensure that
Tier I and Tier II schools or, in an SEA
with an approved ESEA flexibility
request, priority and focus schools
throughout the State can be served.
10. In identifying Tier I, Tier II,
priority, and focus schools in a State for
purposes of allocating funds
appropriated for School Improvement
Grants under section 1003(g) of the
ESEA, an SEA must exclude from
consideration any school that was
previously identified as a Tier I, Tier II,
priority, or focus school and in which
an LEA is implementing one of the
interventions identified in these
requirements using funds made
available under section 1003(g) of the
ESEA.
11. Before submitting its application
for a School Improvement Grant to the
Department, the SEA must consult with
its Committee of Practitioners
established under section 1903(b) of the
ESEA regarding the rules and policies
contained therein and may consult with
other stakeholders that have an interest
in its application.
C. Renewal for additional one-year
periods.
1. An SEA must renew the School
Improvement Grant for each affected
LEA for additional one-year periods,
subject to sections II.C.4–C.6 of these
requirements, if the LEA demonstrates
that its Tier I, Tier II, priority, and focus
schools are meeting the annual goals for
student achievement established by the
LEA consistent with section II.A.8 of
these requirements, and that its Tier III
schools are meeting the goals
established by the LEA and approved by
the SEA.
2. An SEA may renew an LEA’s
School Improvement Grant with respect
to a particular school, subject to the
requirements in sections II.C.4–C.6, if
the SEA determines that, with respect to
that school—
(a) The school is making progress
toward meeting the annual goals for
student achievement established by the
LEA consistent with section II.A.8 of
these requirements;
(b) The school is making progress on
the leading indicators in section III of
these requirements;
(c) The LEA is implementing
interventions in the school with fidelity
to applicable requirements and to the
LEA’s application; or
(d) The LEA’s Tier III school is
making progress toward the goals
established by the LEA.
3. If an SEA does not renew an LEA’s
School Improvement Grant with respect
to a particular school, the SEA may
reallocate those funds to other eligible
LEAs, consistent with these
requirements.
4. An SEA, prior to renewing the
School Improvement Grant of an LEA
that received funds for a full year of
planning and other pre-implementation
activities for a particular school, must
review the performance of the LEA in
that school during the planning year
against the LEA’s approved application
and determine that the LEA will be able
to fully implement its chosen
intervention for the school on the first
day of the following school year.
5. An SEA may renew an LEA’s
School Improvement Grant for a
particular school, after three years of
continuous intervention
implementation in that school, after the
SEA has determined that such renewal
is appropriate pursuant to the criteria in
sections II.C.1–C.2 of these
requirements, for up to an additional
two years for continued full
implementation of the intervention or
for activities related to sustaining
reforms in the school. An SEA may not
Metric
renew an LEA’s School Improvement
Grant if doing so would result in more
than five years of continuous School
Improvement Grants funding with
respect to a particular school.
6. Nothing in these requirements
diminishes an SEA’s authority to take
appropriate enforcement action with
respect to an LEA that is not complying
with the terms of its grant.
D. State reservation for
administration, evaluation, and
technical assistance.
An SEA may reserve from the School
Improvement Grants funds it receives
under section 1003(g) of the ESEA in
any given year no more than five
percent for administration, evaluation,
and technical assistance expenses. An
SEA must describe in its application for
a School Improvement Grant how the
SEA will use these funds.
III. Reporting and Evaluation
A. Reporting metrics.
To inform and evaluate the
effectiveness of the interventions
identified in these requirements, the
Secretary will collect data on the
metrics in the following chart.
Accordingly, an SEA must report only
the following new data with respect to
School Improvement Grants:
1. A list of the LEAs, including their
NCES identification numbers, that
received a School Improvement Grant
under section 1003(g) of the ESEA and
the amount of the grant.
2. For each LEA that received a
School Improvement Grant, a list of the
schools that were served, their NCES
identification numbers, and the amount
of funds or value of services each school
received.
3. For any Tier I, Tier II, priority, or
focus school, school-level data on the
metrics designated on the following
chart as ‘‘SIG’’ (School Improvement
Grants):
Source
Achievement
indicators
Leading
indicators
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SCHOOL DATA
Which intervention the school used (e.g., turnaround, restart, evidence-based, whole
school reform strategy).
Number of schools in rural LEAs implementing an intervention model with a modified
element pursuant to section I.B.6 of these requirements.
Which intervention the school in a rural LEA implementing an intervention model with
a modified element pursuant to section I.B.6 of these requirements used.
AYP status ........................................................................................................................
Which AYP targets the school met and missed ...............................................................
School improvement status ..............................................................................................
Number of minutes within the school year .......................................................................
SIG ...................
............................
............................
SIG ...................
............................
............................
SIG ...................
............................
............................
EDFacts ............
EDFacts ............
EDFacts ............
SIG ...................
✓
✓
✓
............................
............................
............................
............................
✓
STUDENT OUTCOME/ACADEMIC PROGRESS DATA
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Metric
Source
Achievement
indicators
Leading
indicators
Percentage of students at or above each proficiency level on State assessments in
reading/language arts and mathematics (e.g., Basic, Proficient, Advanced), by grade
and by student subgroup.
Student participation rate on State assessments in reading/language arts and in mathematics, by student subgroup.
Average scale scores on State assessments in reading/language arts and in mathematics, by grade, for the ‘‘all students’’ group, for each achievement quartile, and for
each subgroup.
Percentage of limited English proficient students who attain English language proficiency.
Graduation rate .................................................................................................................
Dropout rate ......................................................................................................................
Student attendance rate ...................................................................................................
Number and percentage of students completing advanced coursework (e.g., AP/IB),
early-college high schools, or dual enrollment classes.
College enrollment rates ...................................................................................................
EDFacts ............
✓
............................
EDFacts ............
............................
✓
SIG ...................
✓
............................
SIG ...................
✓
............................
EDFacts ............
EDFacts ............
SIG ...................
SIG HS only .....
✓
............................
............................
............................
............................
✓
✓
✓
EDFacts ............
✓
............................
STUDENT CONNECTION AND SCHOOL CLIMATE
Discipline incidents ...........................................................................................................
Chronic absenteeism rates ...............................................................................................
EDFacts ............
CRDC ...............
............................
............................
✓
✓
TALENT
Distribution of teachers by performance level on LEA’s teacher evaluation system .......
Teacher attendance rate ..................................................................................................
4. An SEA must report these metrics
for the school year prior to
implementing the intervention, if the
data exist, to serve as a baseline, and for
each year thereafter for which the SEA
allocates School Improvement Grants
funds under section 1003(g) of the
ESEA. With respect to a school that is
closed, the SEA need report only the
identity of the school and the
intervention taken—i.e., school closure.
B. Evaluation.
An LEA that receives a School
Improvement Grant must participate in
any evaluation of that grant conducted
by the Secretary.
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Final Requirements
We will announce the final
requirements in a document in the
Federal Register. We will determine the
final requirements after considering
responses to this document and other
information available to the Department.
This document does not preclude us
from proposing additional requirements
subject to meeting applicable
rulemaking requirements.
Note: This document does not solicit
applications. In any year in which we choose
to use one or more of these priorities,
requirements, definitions, and selection
criteria, we invite applications through a
document in the Federal Register.
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
Regulatory Impact Analysis
Under Executive Order 12866, the
Secretary must determine whether this
regulatory action is ‘‘significant’’ and,
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SIG ...................
SIG ...................
therefore, subject to the requirements of
the Executive order and subject to
review by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB). Section 3(f) of Executive
Order 12866 defines a ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ as an action likely to
result in a rule that may—
(1) Have an annual effect on the
economy of $100 million or more, or
adversely affect a sector of the economy,
productivity, competition, jobs, the
environment, public health or safety, or
State, local, or tribal governments or
communities in a material way (also
referred to as an ‘‘economically
significant’’ rule);
(2) Create serious inconsistency or
otherwise interfere with an action taken
or planned by another agency;
(3) Materially alter the budgetary
impacts of entitlement grants, user fees,
or loan programs or the rights and
obligations of recipients thereof; or
(4) Raise novel legal or policy issues
arising out of legal mandates, the
President’s priorities, or the principles
stated in the Executive order.
This proposed regulatory action
would have an annual effect on the
economy of more than $100 million
because fiscal year 2014 appropriations
for the program, which the Department
will award to SEAs in fiscal year 2015,
are approximately $506 million.
Therefore, this proposed action is
‘‘economically significant’’ and subject
to review by OMB under section 3(f)(1)
of Executive Order 12866.
Notwithstanding this determination, we
have assessed the potential costs and
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............................
............................
✓
✓
benefits, both quantitative and
qualitative, of this proposed regulatory
action and have determined that the
benefits would justify the costs.
We have also reviewed this proposed
regulatory action under Executive Order
13563, which supplements and
explicitly reaffirms the principles,
structures, and definitions governing
regulatory review established in
Executive Order 12866. To the extent
permitted by law, Executive Order
13563 requires that an agency—
(1) Propose or adopt regulations only
upon a reasoned determination that
their benefits justify their costs
(recognizing that some benefits and
costs are difficult to quantify);
(2) Tailor its regulations to impose the
least burden on society, consistent with
obtaining regulatory objectives and
taking into account—among other things
and to the extent practicable—the costs
of cumulative regulations;
(3) In choosing among alternative
regulatory approaches, select those
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety,
and other advantages; distributive
impacts; and equity);
(4) To the extent feasible, specify
performance objectives, rather than the
behavior or manner of compliance a
regulated entity must adopt; and
(5) Identify and assess available
alternatives to direct regulation,
including economic incentives—such as
user fees or marketable permits—to
encourage the desired behavior, or
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provide information that enables the
public to make choices.
Executive Order 13563 also requires
an agency ‘‘to use the best available
techniques to quantify anticipated
present and future benefits and costs as
accurately as possible.’’ The Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs of
OMB has emphasized that these
techniques may include ‘‘identifying
changing future compliance costs that
might result from technological
innovation or anticipated behavioral
changes.’’
We are issuing these proposed
requirements only on a reasoned
determination that their benefits would
justify their costs. In choosing among
alternative regulatory approaches, we
selected those approaches that would
maximize net benefits. Based on the
analysis that follows, the Department
believes that this regulatory action is
consistent with the principles in
Executive Order 13563.
We also have determined that this
proposed regulatory action would not
unduly interfere with State, local, and
tribal governments in the exercise of
their governmental functions.
In accordance with both Executive
orders, the Department has assessed the
potential costs and benefits, both
quantitative and qualitative, of this
regulatory action. The potential costs
associated with this regulatory action
are those resulting from statutory
requirements and those we have
determined as necessary for
administering the Department’s
programs and activities.
In this regulatory impact analysis we
discuss the potential costs and benefits
and the regulatory alternatives we
considered.
Discussion of Potential Costs and
Benefits
The Department believes that the
proposed requirements would not
impose significant costs on SEAs and
LEAs that receive SIG funds. State and
local costs of implementing the
proposed requirements (including State
costs of applying for grants, distributing
grant funds to LEAs, ensuring
compliance with the proposed
requirements, and reporting to the
Department; and LEA costs of applying
for subgrants and implementing
interventions) will be financed through
grant funds. We do not believe that the
proposed requirements will impose
burden that SEAs or LEAs will need to
meet from other sources.
This regulatory action would continue
to drive SIG funds to LEAs that have the
lowest-achieving schools in amounts
sufficient to turn those schools around
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and significantly increase student
achievement. It would also continue to
require participating LEAs to adopt the
most effective approaches to turning
around low-achieving schools. In short,
we believe that this action would ensure
that limited SIG funds continue to be
put to their optimum use—that is, that
they are targeted to where they are most
needed and used in the most effective
manner possible. The benefits, then,
would be more effective schools serving
children from low-income families and
a better education for those children.
Regulatory Alternatives Considered
As discussed elsewhere, the
Department believes that the proposed
requirements are needed to ensure that
the SIG program is implemented in a
manner that, among other things, is
consistent with the programmatic
changes made by Congress in the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014.
One alternative to promulgation of the
proposed requirements would be for the
Department to allocate fiscal year 2014
SIG funds without establishing any new
requirements governing their use. Under
such an alternative, States and LEAs
would need to implement the new
provisions in the appropriations
language without key regulatory support
from the Department. For instance, each
State would be responsible for ensuring,
for its LEAs that seek to use SIG funds
to implement an evidence-based, wholeschool reform strategy in an eligible
school, that the strategy selected by the
LEA constitutes whole-school reform
and is supported by at least moderate
evidence of effectiveness. We do not
believe that States generally possess the
capacity or expertise needed to meet
this responsibility with the amount of
rigor expected by Congress.
Elsewhere in this section under
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, we
identify and explain burdens
specifically associated with information
collection requirements.
Accounting Statement
As required by OMB Circular A–4
(available at www.whitehouse.gov/sites/
default/files/omb/assets/omb/circulars/
a004/a-4.pdf), in the following table we
have prepared an accounting statement
showing the classification of the
expenditures associated with the
provisions of this regulatory action. This
table provides our best estimate of the
changes in annual monetized transfers
as a result of this regulatory action.
Expenditures are classified as transfers
from the Federal Government to SEAs.
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ACCOUNTING STATEMENT CLASSIFICATION OF ESTIMATED EXPENDITURES
[in millions]
Category
Annualized Monetized
Transfers.
From Whom To
Whom?
Transfers
$506
From the Federal
Government to
SEAs.
Clarity of the Regulations
Executive Order 12866 and the
Presidential memorandum ‘‘Plain
Language in Government Writing’’
require each agency to write regulations
that are easy to understand.
The Department invites comments on
how to make these proposed regulations
easier to understand, including answers
to questions such as the following:
• Are the requirements in the
proposed regulations clearly stated?
• Do the proposed regulations contain
technical terms or other wording that
interferes with their clarity?
• Does the format of the proposed
regulations (grouping and order of
sections, use of headings, paragraphing,
etc.) aid or reduce their clarity?
• Would the proposed regulations be
easier to understand if we divided them
into more (but shorter) sections?
• Could the description of the
proposed regulations in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this preamble be more helpful in
making the proposed regulations easier
to understand? If so, how?
• What else could we do to make the
proposed regulations easier to
understand?
To send any comments that concern
how the Department could make these
proposed regulations easier to
understand, see the instructions in the
ADDRESSES section.
Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification
The Secretary certifies that these
proposed requirements will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
Under the U.S. Small Business
Administration’s Size Standards, small
entities include small governmental
jurisdictions such as cities, towns, or
school districts (LEAs) with a
population of less than 50,000.
Although the majority of LEAs that
receive title I funds qualify as small
entities under this definition, the
requirements proposed in this
document would not have a significant
economic impact on these small LEAs
because (1) The costs of implementing
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the required interventions would be
covered by the grants received by
successful applicants, and (2) in most
cases the costs of developing and
submitting applications would not be
significantly higher than the costs that
would be incurred in applying for
program funds under the statutory
requirements. Also, small LEAs may
receive technical assistance and other
support from their SEAs in developing
applications for these funds.
The Department believes the benefits
provided under this proposed regulatory
action outweigh the burdens on these
small LEAs of complying with the
proposed requirements. In particular,
the proposed requirements would make
significant resources available to eligible
small LEAs to make the fundamental
changes needed to turn around their
lowest-achieving schools, resources that
otherwise may not be available to small
and often geographically isolated LEAs.
The Secretary invites comments from
small LEAs as to whether they believe
the requirements proposed in this
document would have a significant
economic impact on them and, if so,
requests evidence to support that belief.
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
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As part of its continuing effort to
reduce paperwork and respondent
burden, the Department provides the
general public and Federal agencies
with an opportunity to comment on
proposed and continuing collections of
information in accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA)
(44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A)). This helps
ensure that: the public understands the
Department’s collection instructions,
respondents can provide the requested
data in the desired format, reporting
burden (time and financial resources) is
minimized, collection instruments are
clearly understood, and the Department
can properly assess the impact of
collection requirements on respondents.
A Federal agency may not conduct or
sponsor a collection of information
unless OMB approves the collection
under the PRA and the corresponding
information collection instrument
displays a currently valid OMB control
number. Notwithstanding any other
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provision of law, no person is required
to comply with, or is subject to penalty
for failure to comply with, a collection
of information if the collection
instrument does not display a currently
valid OMB control number.
In the final requirements we will
display the control number 1810–0682
assigned by OMB to any information
collection requirements proposed in
these proposed requirements and
adopted in the final requirements. These
requirements contain information
collection activities covered under the
PRA and currently approved by OMB.
The activities that are currently
approved by OMB consist of: (1) The
SEAs’ preparation of applications to
submit to the Department to apply for
SIG funds and the SEAs’ posting of the
LEAs’ applications on the SEAs’ Web
sites; (2) the reporting of specific schoollevel data on the use of SIG funds and
specific interventions implemented in
LEAs receiving SIG funds that the
Department currently collects through
EDFacts (OMB Control 1875–0240); and
(3) the application an LEA must submit
to apply to its SEA for SIG funds. The
following is a summary of how the
proposed requirements would change
these activities and the effect they
would have on the total burden.
Changes to the SEA Applications
Under proposed requirement section
II.B.1(b), each SEA may submit, as part
of the required application it submits to
the Department to receive SIG funds,
one State-determined intervention
model for review and approval by the
Secretary. These proposed requirements
would require an SEA to submit a
proposed State-determined intervention
model as part of its application, if a
State choses to implement this model.
Under the burden estimates currently
approved by OMB, 52 SEAs will
complete, review, and post SEA and
LEA applications for a total of 46,800
annual burden hours at a cost of $30 per
hour, totaling an annual cost of
$1,404,000. These proposed
requirements do not change the
currently approved annual burden for
SEAs.
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Revising Reporting Requirements
The proposed requirements make a
number of clarifications to the reporting
requirements. First, proposed
requirement section III.A.3 eliminates
the metric for ‘‘Truants’’ and replaces it
with ‘‘Chronic absenteeism rates.’’
Second, proposed requirement III.A
clarifies the correct source for each of
the required metrics and removes
references to the SFSF previously
approved under OMB data collection
1810–0695. Finally, proposed
requirements in section III.A.3 would
require an SEA to report, with respect
to schools receiving SIG awards, the
number of schools implementing
models with a modified element
pursuant to proposed section I.B.6 and
which models are being implemented in
those schools.
Under the reporting burden estimates,
52 SEAs will report SEA and LEA
requirements for a total of 3,640 annual
burden hours at a cost of $30 per hour
totaling an annual cost of $109,200.
These proposed requirements add
burden to the currently approved
annual burden for SEAs.
Changes to the LEA Application
The proposed requirements also add
to the existing requirements in section
I.A.4(a) (Evidence of strongest
commitment) information that, under
proposed section II.A.2(c), the LEA must
include in the LEA application related
to an evidence-based, whole-school
reform strategy (for those LEAs that
propose to implement such a strategy);
meaningful family and community
engagement; LEA oversight and support
of SIG implementation; review of, and
accountability for, external provider
performance; and the review process for
selecting a charter school operator,
CMO, or EMO.
Under the burden estimates that are
currently approved by OMB, 3,050 LEAs
will complete an application for a total
of 183,000 annual burden hours at a cost
of $25 per hour totaling an annual cost
of $4,575,000. These proposed
requirements do not change the
approved annual burden for LEAs.
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 173 / Monday, September 8, 2014 / Proposed Rules
53275
Collection of Information
STATE EDUCATIONAL AGENCY ESTIMATE
Number of
SEAs
SIG Activity
Hours/activity
Hours
Cost/hour
Cost
Complete SEA application (including requests for waivers) .............................................................................
Review and post LEA applications ................................
52
52
100
800
5,200
41,600
$30
30
$156,000
1,248,000
Reporting ........................................................................
52
70
3,640
30
109,200
50,440
30
1,513,200
Total ........................................................................
LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCY ESTIMATE
Number of
LEAs
SIG Activity
Complete LEA application ...................................................
Hours/activity
3,050
60
rmajette on DSK2TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
VerDate Mar<15>2010
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exploring the use of appropriate
automated, electronic, mechanical, or
other technological collection
techniques.
ADDRESSES: Comments submitted in
response to this document should be
submitted electronically through the
Federal eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov by selecting
Docket ID ED–2014–OESE–0179 or via
postal mail, commercial delivery, or
hand delivery. Please note that
comments submitted by fax or email
and those submitted after the comment
period will not be accepted. Written
requests for information or comments
submitted by postal mail or delivery
should be addressed to the Director of
the Information Collection Clearance
Division, U.S. Department of Education,
400 Maryland Avenue SW., Mailstop
L–OM–2–2E319LBJ, Room 2E115,
Washington, DC 20202–4537.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Electronically mail ICDocketMgr@
ed.gov. Please do not send comments
here.
Intergovernmental Review
This program is not subject to
Executive Order 12372 and the
regulations in 34 CFR part 79.
Accessible Format: Individuals with
disabilities can obtain this document in
an accessible format (e.g., braille, large
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Cost/hour
Cost
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
183,000
$25
$4,575,000
183,000
Total .....................................................................................
To comment on the information
collection requirements, please send
your comments to the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
OMB, Attention: Desk Officer for U.S.
Department of Education. Send these
comments by email to OIRA_DOCKET@
omb.eop.gov or by fax to (202) 395–
6974. You may also send a copy of these
comments to the Department via the
Federal eRulemaking Portal listed in the
ADDRESSES section.
We have prepared an Information
Collection Request (ICR) for these
collections. In preparing your comments
you may want to comment on the ICR,
which is available at www.reginfo.gov.
Click on Information Collection Review.
This ICR is identified as 1810–0682.
We consider your comments on this
collection of information in—
• Deciding whether the collections
are necessary for the proper
performance of our functions, including
whether the information will have
practical use;
• Evaluating the accuracy of our
estimate of the burden of the
collections, including the validity of our
methodology and assumptions;
• Enhancing the quality, usefulness,
and clarity of the information we
collect; and
• Minimizing the burden on those
who must respond. This includes
Hours
25
4,575,000
print, audiotape, or compact disc) on
request to the person listed under FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
Electronic Access to This Document:
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 via the Federal Digital System
at: www.gpo.gov/fdsys. At this site 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). To use PDF you must
have Adobe Acrobat Reader, which is
available free at the site.
You may also access documents of the
Department published in the Federal
Register by using the article search
feature at: www.federalregister.gov.
Specifically, through the advanced
search feature at this site, you can limit
your search to documents published by
the Department.
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Number 84.377A)
Dated: September 2, 2014.
Deborah Delisle,
Assistant Secretary for Elementary and
Secondary Education.
[FR Doc. 2014–21185 Filed 9–5–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000–01–P
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 173 (Monday, September 8, 2014)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 53253-53275]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-21185]
[[Page 53253]]
Vol. 79
Monday,
No. 173
September 8, 2014
Part II
Department of Education
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34 CFR Chapter II
Proposed Requirements--School Improvement Grants--Title I of the
Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 173 / Monday, September 8, 2014 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 53254]]
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DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
34 CFR Chapter II
RIN 1810-AB22
[Docket ID ED-2014-OESE-0079]
Proposed Requirements--School Improvement Grants--Title I of the
Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965
AGENCY: Office of Elementary and Secondary Education, Department of
Education (Department).
ACTION: Proposed requirements.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Secretary of Education (Secretary) proposes revising
the final requirements for the School Improvement Grants (SIG) program,
published in the Federal Register on October 28, 2010, authorized under
section 1003(g) of title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education
Act of 1965, as amended (ESEA), to implement language in the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014, that allows local educational
agencies (LEAs) to implement additional interventions, provides
flexibility for rural LEAs, and extends the grant period from three to
five years. Additionally, the proposed requirements make changes that
reflect lessons learned from four years of SIG implementation.
DATES: We must receive your comments on or before October 8, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments through the Federal eRulemaking Portal
or via postal mail, commercial delivery, or hand delivery. We will not
accept comments submitted by fax or by email or those submitted after
the comment period. To ensure that we do not receive duplicate copies,
please submit your comments only once. In addition, please include the
Docket ID at the top of your comments.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to www.regulations.gov to
submit your comments electronically. Information on using
Regulations.gov, including instructions for accessing agency documents,
submitting comments, and viewing the docket, is available on the site
under ``Are you new to the site?''
Postal Mail, Commercial Delivery, or Hand Delivery: If you
mail or deliver your comments about these proposed regulations, address
them to Elizabeth Ross, U.S. Department of Education, 400 Maryland
Avenue SW., room 3C116, Washington, DC 20202.
Privacy Note: The Department's policy is to make all comments
received from members of the public available for public viewing in
their entirety on the Federal eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov. Therefore, commenters should be careful to
include in their comments only information that they wish to make
publicly available.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Elizabeth Ross, U.S. Department of
Education, 400 Maryland Avenue SW., room 3C116, Washington, DC 20202.
Telephone: (202) 260-8961 or by email: Elizabeth.Ross@ed.gov.
If you use a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD) or a text
telephone (TTY), call the Federal Relay Service (FRS), toll free, at 1-
800-877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Executive Summary
Purpose of This Regulatory Action: These proposed requirements
would implement language in the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014,
to allow LEAs to implement evidence-based, whole-school reform
strategies and State-determined school improvement intervention models,
provide flexibility for rural LEAs implementing a SIG intervention, and
extend the allowable grant period from three to five years.
Additionally, the proposed requirements would make changes that reflect
lessons learned from four years of SIG implementation. This regulatory
action is authorized by the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014
(Public Law 113-76) and 20 U.S.C. 6303(g).
Summary of the Major Provisions of This Regulatory Action: As
discussed in more depth in the Proposed Changes section of this
document, the Department proposes the following revisions to the
current SIG requirements to implement language in the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2014: Allowing five-year SIG awards; adding State-
determined school improvement intervention models; adding evidence-
based, whole-school reform strategies; and allowing rural LEAs to
modify one SIG intervention model element.
The Department also proposes the following revisions to the current
SIG requirements to strengthen program implementation based on lessons
learned and input from stakeholders: Adding an intervention model that
focuses on improving educational outcomes in preschool and early
grades, adding an LEA requirement to demonstrate the appropriateness of
the chosen intervention model and take into consideration family and
community input in the selection of the model; adding an LEA
requirement to continuously engage families and the community
throughout implementation; adding an LEA requirement to monitor and
support intervention implementation; adding an LEA requirement to
regularly review external providers' performance and hold external
providers accountable; eliminating the ``rule of nine''; and revising
reporting requirements.
The Department proposes the following revisions to current SIG
requirements: Modifying the teacher and principal evaluation and
support system requirements under the transformation model; clarifying
the rigorous review process under the restart model; clarifying renewal
criteria; defining ``greatest need'' to include priority and focus
schools for State educational agencies (SEAs) with approved ESEA
flexibility requests; clarifying flexibility for previously implemented
interventions (in whole or in part); and clarifying requirements
related to the posting of LEAs' SIG applications.
Finally, the Department proposes removing references to fiscal year
2009 and fiscal year 2010 funds and the differentiated accountability
pilot because those references are no longer necessary.
Costs and Benefits: The Department believes that the benefits of
this regulatory action outweigh any associated costs to SEAs and LEAs,
which would be financed with grant funds. The benefits of this action
would be more effective State and local actions, using Federal funds,
to turn around their lowest-performing schools and achieve significant
improvement in educational outcomes for the students attending those
schools. Please refer to the Regulatory Impact Analysis in this
document for a more detailed discussion of costs and benefits.
Consistent with Executive Order 12866, the Secretary has determined
that this action is economically significant and, thus, is subject to
review by the Office of Management and Budget under the order.
Invitation to Comment: We invite you to submit comments regarding
the proposed revisions described in the ``Proposed Changes'' section of
this document. To ensure that your comments have maximum effect in
developing the final requirements, we urge you to identify clearly the
specific proposed revision that each comment addresses.
We invite you to assist us in complying with the specific
requirements of Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 and their overall
requirement of reducing regulatory burden that might result from these
proposed requirements. Please let us know of any further ways we could
reduce potential costs or increase potential benefits
[[Page 53255]]
while preserving the effective and efficient administration of the
Department's programs and activities.
During and after the comment period, you may inspect all public
comments about this document by accessing Regulations.gov. You may also
inspect the comments in person in Room 3W100, 400 Maryland Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC, between 8:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., Washington, DC time,
Monday through Friday of each week except Federal holidays. Please
contact the person listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
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 document. 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: In conjunction with title I funds for school
improvement reserved under section 1003(a) of the ESEA, SIG funds under
section 1003(g) of the ESEA are used to improve student achievement in
title I schools identified for improvement, corrective action, or
restructuring so as to enable those schools to make adequate yearly
progress (AYP) and exit improvement status.
Program Authority: 20 U.S.C. 6303(g); Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2014 (Pub. L. 113-76).
Proposed Requirements
Background
The Department issued final requirements for the SIG program on
December 10, 2009 (74 FR 65618). On January 21, 2010, the Department
subsequently published interim final requirements (75 FR 3375), which
became final on October 28, 2010 (75 FR 66363).
The SIG program provides grants to support rigorous interventions
aimed at turning around our Nation's persistently lowest-achieving
schools. In general, SEAs that receive funds under the SIG program
competitively subgrant those funds to LEAs to implement one of four
interventions defined in current requirements: The turnaround model,
the restart model, school closure, and the transformation model. In
awarding SIG funds, an SEA must give priority to LEAs with the lowest-
achieving schools that demonstrate (1) the greatest need for the funds
and (2) the strongest commitment to ensuring that the funds are used to
provide adequate resources to enable the lowest-achieving schools to
meet their goals for substantially raising the achievement of their
students.
Division H, title III of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014
(Public Law 113-76), signed into law on January 17, 2014, made
significant changes to the SIG program. These proposed requirements
would implement these changes, make other revisions that reflect
lessons learned from four years of SIG implementation, and help ensure
consistency between this program and other Department initiatives.
In interpreting the relevant provisions of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2014, and in considering changes to the current
requirements, the Department was guided by the following principles:
(1) Preserve and protect the key benefits and rigor of the SIG program,
which has helped SEAs and LEAs implement rigorous, comprehensive
interventions in their lowest-performing schools; (2) minimize
disruption to existing State and local program implementation; and (3)
strengthen program implementation wherever possible based on lessons
learned and input from stakeholders.
The requirements proposed here would apply to the LEA subgrant
competitions that SEAs conduct during the 2014-2015 school year for
implementation beginning in the 2015-2016 school year.
Proposed Changes
Allowing Five-Year Awards
Current Requirements: Consistent with the current requirements,
SEAs make competitive awards for up to three years to LEAs to implement
SIG interventions in eligible schools.
Proposed Requirements: Under the proposed requirements in section
II.A.3, II.A.2(e)(1), II.C.4, and II.C.5, described in detail below,
the Department would allow an SEA to make a SIG award to an LEA for up
to five years, of which the LEA may use one school year for planning
and other pre-implementation activities, must use at least three school
years for full implementation of the selected interventions, and may
use up to two school years for activities related to sustaining reforms
following at least three years of full intervention implementation. If
an LEA receives funding for a school year for planning and other pre-
implementation activities, it would be eligible for only one year of
funding for activities related to sustaining reforms following full
intervention implementation. An LEA may not receive more than five
years of continuous funding for the implementation of a single SIG
intervention with respect to any particular school.
Specifically, the Department proposes adding in section II.A.3 (LEA
requirements) a requirement that an LEA that intends to use the first
year of its SIG award for planning and other pre-implementation
activities for an eligible school must include in its application to
the SEA a description of the planning or pre-implementation activities
it will undertake, the timeline for implementing those activities, and
a description of how those activities will lead to successful
implementation of the selected intervention.
In section II.A.2(e)(1), the Department also proposes to explicitly
require an LEA to fully implement a SIG intervention in a school for at
least three years (subject to the SEA's renewal authority), consistent
with the current requirements.
The Department also proposes adding two requirements regarding
renewal of annual SIG awards to section II.C of the current
requirements. First, we propose in section II.C.4 that prior to
renewing the SIG award of an LEA that received SIG funds for a school
year of planning and other pre-implementation activities for a school,
an SEA would be required to review the performance of the school
against the LEA's approved application. The SEA would conduct this
review to determine whether the LEA will be able to fully implement its
chosen intervention for the school beginning the first day of the
following school year. Second, the Department proposes in section
II.C.5 to permit an SEA to renew an LEA's SIG award for a school, after
three years of full implementation of an intervention in that school,
for up to two additional years for continued full implementation of the
intervention or for activities that are related to sustaining reforms
(but do not constitute full intervention implementation), based on the
same criteria that an SEA considers in making renewal decisions under
section II.C.1-II.C.2. Under this proposal, an LEA would not be
permitted to receive more than five years of continuous SIG funding
with respect to any particular school.
Reasons: The Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014, allows the
Secretary to permit an SEA to establish an award period of up to five
years for each participating LEA, thereby providing more time than
allowed under current requirements for LEAs to implement SIG
interventions. Additionally, the Department's proposed requirements
would allow
[[Page 53256]]
flexibility in two important ways to strengthen SIG implementation.
First, the proposed requirements allow one school year for LEA planning
prior to full implementation of a SIG intervention for those LEAs and
schools that would benefit from that time. Although an LEA may
currently use SIG funds for the planning and other activities it
conducts between the time it receives a SIG award and the beginning of
the first school year of implementation (i.e., the following school
year), the Department has determined that this ``pre-implementation''
period may not be sufficient to ensure that LEAs are prepared to
implement SIG interventions effectively at the beginning of the first
school year of implementation. For example, SEAs typically make SIG
awards to LEAs in spring or early summer, which in some LEAs is after
personnel contracts have been negotiated and signed for the following
school year, thus preventing the personnel changes required by certain
SIG interventions. Accordingly, the additional planning time permitted
under the proposed requirements may lead to greater success in
implementation by recognizing the long lead times that may be necessary
to make the fundamental structural and personnel changes required by
SIG interventions and to engage sufficiently school staff, families,
and the broader community in the planning and pre-implementation work
of turning around a low-performing school. This proposed requirement
would not affect the requirement to implement an intervention for a
full school year in order for that school year to count as one of the
three required years of full implementation.
To help ensure that a planning year in a particular school will
lead to greater success in implementation, the proposed requirements
require (1) an LEA seeking funds for a planning year in a particular
school to describe in its application to the SEA the planning or pre-
implementation activities it will undertake, the timeline for
implementing those activities, and a description of how those
activities will lead to successful implementation of the selected
intervention and (2) an SEA to review the school's performance during
the planning year against the LEA's approved application prior to
renewing the portion of the LEA's grant for that school for full
implementation in the following school year.
Second, the proposed requirements address the difficulty that LEAs
may face in sustaining SIG-funded reforms after the implementation
period by permitting an SEA to renew an LEA's SIG award for each school
for up to two additional years for sustainability-related activities,
based on the same criteria that an SEA considers in making renewal
decisions under section II.C.1-II.C.2. LEAs could use this additional
time to ensure that SIG reforms have been successfully integrated into
each school's ongoing operations. The Department expects that LEAs will
request lower funding amounts for planning- and sustainability-related
activities as compared to amounts for the years of full intervention
implementation because these activities should be less costly than
those related to full implementation.
Adding State-Determined School Improvement Intervention Models
Current Requirements: None.
Proposed Requirements: The Department proposes in section I.A.2(g)
to allow an LEA to use SIG funds to implement, in one or more SIG-
eligible schools, a State-determined intervention model that has been
developed or adopted by its SEA and that has been approved by the
Secretary.
Under section II.B.1(b) of the proposed requirements, each SEA may
submit, as part of its SIG application to the Department, one State-
determined intervention model for review and approval by the Secretary.
Under this proposal, a State-determined intervention model must (1) be
aligned with the ``turnaround principles'' established under ESEA
flexibility \1\ and (2) provide for increased learning time (ILT), as
defined in the current requirements and unchanged in these proposed
requirements.\2\ Specifically, to be approved under proposed section
II.B.1(b), a State-determined intervention model would be required to:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ ``ESEA flexibility'' refers to flexibility the Department
offered SEAs regarding specific requirements of the ESEA in exchange
for rigorous and comprehensive State-developed plans designed to
improve educational outcomes for all students, close achievement
gaps, increase equity, and improve the quality of instruction.
Forty-three States, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico are
approved for ESEA flexibility. More information about ESEA
flexibility, including detailed information about the turnaround
principles, can be found in the document ESEA Flexibility, updated
June 7, 2012, available at https://www2.ed.gov/policy/elsec/guid/esea-flexibility/.
\2\ The current requirements define ILT as using a longer school
day, week, or year schedule to significantly increase the total
number of school hours to include additional time for:
(a) Instruction in core academic subjects including English,
reading or language arts, mathematics, science, foreign languages,
civics and government, economics, arts, history, and geography;
(b) Instruction in other subjects and enrichment activities
that contribute to a well-rounded education, including, for example,
physical education, service learning, and experiential and work-
based learning opportunities that are provided by partnering, as
appropriate, with other organizations; and
(c) Teachers to collaborate, plan, and engage in professional
development within and across grades and subjects.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Ensure strong leadership by: (A) Requiring a review of the
performance of the current principal; (B) requiring replacement of the
principal, if such a change is necessary to ensure strong and effective
leadership, or requiring the LEA to demonstrate to the SEA that the
current principal has a track record in improving achievement and has
the ability to lead the turnaround effort; and (C) requiring the LEA to
provide the principal with operational flexibility in the areas of
scheduling, staff, curriculum, and budget;
(2) Ensure that teachers are effective and able to improve
instruction by: (A) Requiring a review of all staff and retaining only
those who are determined to be effective and to have the ability to be
successful in supporting the turnaround effort; (B) preventing
ineffective teachers from transferring to a SIG-funded school; and (C)
providing job-embedded, ongoing professional development informed by
the teacher evaluation and support systems and tied to teachers' and
students' needs;
(3) Establish schedules and implement strategies that provide ILT;
(4) Strengthen the school's instructional program by ensuring that
it (A) is research-based, rigorous, and aligned with State academic
content standards; and (B) meets students' needs;
(5) Use data to inform instruction and for continuous improvement,
including through the provision of time for collaboration on the use of
data;
(6) Establish a school environment that improves school safety and
discipline and addresses other non-academic factors that impact student
achievement, such as students' social, emotional, and health needs; and
(7) Provide ongoing mechanisms for family and community engagement.
An intervention that the Secretary approved as part of an SEA's ESEA
flexibility request that also includes ILT would be considered to have
met these criteria.
Reasons: The Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014, permits an LEA
to use SIG funds to implement a State-determined intervention model
that has been approved by the Secretary.
As part of ESEA flexibility, the Department established the
``turnaround principles'' to guide SEAs in developing rigorous
interventions to turn around
[[Page 53257]]
their ``priority'' schools, as those schools are defined in ESEA
flexibility. The turnaround principles are based on the elements of the
SIG transformation model, but provide additional flexibility with
respect to replacing the principal and implementing ILT. This
additional flexibility reflects, in part, the recognition that LEAs
with priority schools may not receive additional funding through the
SIG program to support the implementation of interventions in these
schools. The Department believes, based on experience thus far with SIG
and ESEA flexibility, that the turnaround principles provide a baseline
expectation for the elements of comprehensive, whole-school reform
consistent with the purpose of the SIG program and, thus, reflect
appropriate criteria for use by the Secretary in approving a State-
determined intervention model. Further, linking approval of State-
determined intervention models to the turnaround principles will
facilitate and simplify the approval and implementation process for
this new intervention model because many States have already developed
rigorous interventions for their priority schools under ESEA
flexibility that are consistent with the turnaround principles. SEAs
that receive approval of their State-determined intervention model
would then be able to use SIG funds to support their multi-year plans
under ESEA flexibility for implementing rigorous interventions in their
priority schools that meet the definition of ``priority schools'' in
ESEA flexibility.
In addition to ensuring that any State-determined intervention
model is consistent with the turnaround principles, the proposed
requirements provide that a State-determined intervention model must
include the implementation of ILT. The Department believes that the
comprehensive implementation of ILT would provide essential support for
key improvements in teaching and learning required by interventions
consistent with the turnaround principles, and thus should be included
in any State-determined intervention model approved by the Secretary.
The Department did not explicitly include ILT in the turnaround
principles of ESEA flexibility due to its potential costs, which may
exceed the resources available to SEAs and LEAs to support priority
interventions in the absence of SIG or other dedicated turnaround
funds. However, the availability of up to $2 million annually for a
school implementing an approved State-determined intervention model
through the SIG program mitigates such resource limitation concerns.
Evidence from the field shows that increasing learning time in a
strategic, high-quality manner is often a key element of successful
school turnaround. For example, The Case for Improving and Expanding
Time in School: A Review of Key Research and Practice, published in
April 2012 by the National Center on Time and Learning (NCTL) and
available at www.timeandlearning.org/files/
CaseforMoreTime1.pdf, summarizes evidence demonstrating that a
longer school day and longer school year implemented consistently with
the principles of ILT can have a meaningful impact on improving student
achievement. Providing time to allow for enrichment activities, teacher
collaboration, and professional development, in addition to instruction
in core academic subjects including math, science, and reading, is key
to ensuring success.
Adding Evidence-Based, Whole-School Reform Strategies
Current Requirements: None.
Proposed Requirements: Section I.A.2(e) of the proposed
requirements would allow an LEA to use SIG funds to implement, in
partnership with a strategy developer, an evidence-based, whole-school
reform strategy in a school. Under this proposed requirement, such a
strategy must have evidence of effectiveness that includes at least two
studies that meet What Works Clearinghouse evidence standards with or
without reservations (i.e., qualifying experimental or quasi-
experimental studies) and that found a statistically significant
favorable impact on a student academic achievement or attainment
outcome, with no statistically significant and overriding unfavorable
impacts on that outcome for relevant populations in the study or in
other studies of the intervention reviewed by and reported on by the
What Works Clearinghouse.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ What Works Clearinghouse Procedures and Standards Handbook
(Version 3.0), which can currently be found at the following link:
https://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/pdf/referenceresources/
wwcproceduresv30standards
handbook.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed requirements include two related definitions. First,
the proposed requirements in section I.A.3 define ``whole-school reform
strategy'' as a strategy that (1) is designed to improve student
academic achievement or attainment; (2) is implemented for all students
in a school; and (3) addresses, at a minimum and in a comprehensive and
coordinated manner, school leadership, teaching and learning in at
least one full academic content area (including professional learning
for educators), student non-academic support, and family and community
engagement.\4\ Second, the proposed requirements define ``strategy
developer'' as an entity or individual that maintains proprietary
rights for the strategy or, if no entity or individual maintains
proprietary rights for the strategy, an entity or individual that has a
demonstrated record of success in implementing the strategy in one or
more low-achieving schools or that, together with a partner LEA, has a
high-quality plan for implementing the strategy in a school.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ The Department intends to invite strategy developers and
other entities to submit prospective strategies and research studies
of the effectiveness of those strategies for review against the
proposed evidence requirement discussed in the preceding paragraph
and the requirements of the proposed definition of ``whole-school
reform strategy.'' The Department intends to identify, from among
the strategies submitted for review, those that meet requirements in
advance of SEAs' competitions for fiscal year 2014 SIG funds. An LEA
seeking to use SIG funds to implement, in partnership with a
strategy developer, an evidence-based, whole-school reform strategy
would be permitted to choose from among the strategies so identified
by the Department.
The Department will provide information regarding the
submission and review of prospective strategies on its Web site at
https://www.ed.gov/programs/sif/npr-wholeschlreform.html, and may re-
open the submission and review process, if necessary, based on the
final requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, the Department proposes adding section I.A.4(a)(10)
(Evidence of strongest commitment), which would require the SEA, when
considering the strength of the LEA's commitment, to evaluate the
extent to which an LEA that is proposing to implement an evidence-
based, whole-school reform strategy in a school demonstrates that the
evidence supporting the strategy it proposes to implement includes a
sample population or setting similar to the population or setting of
the school to be served. The SEA would also consider the extent to
which the LEA has demonstrated that it has partnered with a strategy
developer that meets the proposed definition of ``strategy developer.''
Notably, under proposed section II.A.2(c), an LEA would have to provide
evidence of its strong commitment to use SIG funds to implement the
selected intervention by addressing the factors in section I.A.4(a),
and under proposed section II.B.2(b)(2), the SEA would have to ensure
that the LEA's application makes the required demonstration prior to
approving the LEA's application.
Reasons: The Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014, permits an LEA
to use SIG funds to implement, in partnership with a strategy
developer, a
[[Page 53258]]
whole-school reform strategy that is based on at least a moderate level
of evidence that the strategy will have a statistically significant
effect on student outcomes, including more than one experimental or
quasi-experimental study. In addition, as stated in its report
accompanying its fiscal year 2014 appropriations bill for the
Department (Senate Report 113-71), the Senate Appropriations Committee
expects that any approach taken with SIG funds will address schoolwide
factors, including, for example, curriculum and instruction, social and
emotional support services for students, and training and support for
teachers and school leaders. The proposed requirements described in
this section are intended to implement the Consolidated Appropriations
Act, 2014, provision in a manner consistent with the Senate Committee
report language.
The Department notes that 34 CFR 77.1 (Definitions that apply to
all Department programs) defines ``moderate evidence of effectiveness''
as including at least one study that, among other things, meets What
Works Clearinghouse evidence standards with or without reservations and
found a statistically significant favorable impact on a relevant
outcome. Because the provision in the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2014, requires more than one such study as evidence of a strategy's
effectiveness, the Department cannot use the definition of ``moderate
evidence of effectiveness'' in 34 CFR 77.1 to implement the provision
and must instead propose the program-specific evidence requirement in
section I.A.2(e).
The proposed definition of ``whole-school reform strategy'' is
intended to ensure that a strategy implemented by an LEA is consistent
not only with the Senate Committee report language but also with
evidence from the field and the research literature on whole-school
reform by specifying that the strategy address, in a comprehensive and
coordinated manner, schoolwide factors essential to successful school
turnaround efforts.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Stringfield, S., Millsap, M., Yoder, N., Schaffer, E.,
Nesselrodt, P., Gamse, B., Brigham, N., Moss, M., Herman, R., &
Bedinger, S. (1997). Special strategies studies final report.
Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Education. An executive summary
of the report is available at www.csos.jhu.edu/Otherlinks/SpecialStrategies/intro.htm, finding that ``[s]tudents in schools
working with whole school reform tended to achieve greater gains
than did students in schools attempting various pull-out programs.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed definition of ``strategy developer,'' as well as the
related proposed requirements regarding whether an LEA has partnered
with a strategy developer that meets the proposed definition, are
intended to ensure that the entity or individual with whom an LEA
partners to implement an evidence-based, whole-school reform strategy
possesses the required qualifications or has a high-quality plan for
successful implementation of the strategy in an eligible school.
Finally, the proposed requirements regarding whether the evidence
of effectiveness for a strategy proposed for implementation in a school
includes a sample overlapping with the populations or settings of that
school are intended to ensure the relevance and appropriateness of the
strategy for the students and the school.
Rural LEAs' Modification of One SIG Intervention Model Element
Current Requirements: None.
Proposed Requirements: The Department proposes to add a provision
in section I.B.6 to permit an LEA that is eligible for services under
subpart 1 or 2 of part B of title VI of the ESEA (referred to herein as
a rural LEA) to modify one element of the turnaround or transformation
model so long as the modification meets the intent and purpose of the
original element.
The Department also proposes to modify the language introducing the
turnaround and transformation models' requirements in sections I.A.2(a)
and I.A.2(d) of the current requirements to clarify that those models'
requirements are ``elements.'' Other than the proposed changes
discussed in the following section, the Department is not proposing to
substantively change the elements of the turnaround and transformation
models themselves.
Additionally, the Department proposes adding section I.A.4(a)(9)
(Evidence of strongest commitment), which would require the SEA, when
considering the strength of the LEA's commitment, to evaluate the
extent to which a rural LEA applying to implement the turnaround or
transformation model and modify one element of that model has
demonstrated that it will meet the intent and purpose of the original
element. For example, if a rural LEA applying to implement a turnaround
model seeks to modify the element of the model that requires the LEA to
replace the principal, the LEA must demonstrate in its application how
it will ensure strong leadership in the school. The LEA could do this
by demonstrating to the SEA that the current principal has a track
record in improving student achievement and has the experience and
skills needed to implement the intervention.
Finally, the Department proposes adding reporting requirements to
section III.A.3 that would require an SEA to report, with respect to
schools receiving SIG funds, the number of schools implementing models
with a modified element pursuant to proposed section I.B.6 and which
models are being implemented in those schools.
Reasons: The Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014, permits an LEA
eligible for services under subpart 1 or 2 of part B of title VI of the
ESEA (Rural Education Achievement Program) to modify not more than one
element of a SIG intervention model. The proposed requirements are
intended to implement this flexibility while maintaining the integrity
of the SIG intervention models in the current requirements and ensuring
that the reporting requirements capture relevant information about LEAs
availing themselves of this flexibility.
Adding Early Learning Intervention Model
Current Requirements: None.
Proposed Requirements: Section I.A.2(f) of the proposed
requirements would allow an LEA to use SIG funds to implement an early
learning intervention model in an elementary school. Under this
proposed requirement, an LEA implementing the early learning
intervention model in an elementary school must--
(1) Implement each of the following early learning strategies--
(A) Offer full-day kindergarten;
(B) Establish or expand a high-quality preschool program;
(C) Provide educators, including preschool teachers, with time for
joint planning across grades to facilitate effective teaching and
learning and positive teacher-student interactions.
(2) Replace the principal who led the school prior to commencement
of the early learning model;
(3) Implement the same rigorous, transparent, and equitable
evaluation and support systems for teachers and principals, designed
and developed with teacher and principal involvement, that the
Department proposes to require under the transformation model;
(4) Use the teacher and principal evaluation and support system to
identify and reward school leaders, teachers, and other staff who, in
implementing this model, have increased student achievement and
identify and remove those who, after ample opportunities have been
provided for them to improve their professional practice, have not done
so;
(5) Implement such strategies as financial incentives, increased
[[Page 53259]]
opportunities for promotion and career growth, and more flexible work
conditions that are designed to recruit, place, and retain staff with
the skills necessary to meet the needs of students in the school,
taking into consideration the results from the teacher and principal
evaluation and support system, if applicable;
(6) Use data to identify and implement an instructional program
that (a) is research-based, developmentally appropriate, and vertically
aligned from one grade to the next as well as aligned with State early
learning and development standards and State academic standards and (b)
in the early grades, promotes the full range of academic content across
domains of development, including math and science, language and
literacy, socio-emotional skills, self-regulation, and executive
functions;
(7) Promote the continuous use of student data (such as from
formative, interim, and summative assessments) to inform and
differentiate instruction in order to meet the educational and
developmental needs of individual students; and
(8) Provide staff ongoing, high-quality, job-embedded professional
development such as coaching and mentoring (e.g., regarding subject-
specific pedagogy, instruction that reflects a deeper understanding of
the community served by the school, or differentiated instruction) that
is aligned with the school's comprehensive instructional program and
designed with school staff to ensure they are equipped to facilitate
effective teaching and learning and have the capacity to implement
successfully school reform strategies.
The Department also proposes adding to section I.A.3 the definition
of ``high-quality preschool program'' based on the definition that is
used in the Preschool Development Grants program.\6\ Under this
definition, ``high-quality preschool program'' would mean an early
learning program that includes structural elements that are evidence-
based and nationally recognized as important for ensuring program
quality, including at a minimum--
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ See the notice inviting applications for the Preschool
Development Grants program, published in the Federal Register on
August 18, 2014 (79 FR 48853).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) High staff qualifications, including a teacher with a
bachelor's degree in early childhood education or a bachelor's degree
in any field with a State-approved alternate pathway, which may include
coursework, clinical practice, and evidence of knowledge of content and
pedagogy relating to early childhood, and teaching assistants with
appropriate credentials;
(2) High-quality professional development for all staff;
(3) A child-to-instructional staff ratio of no more than 10 to 1;
(4) A class size of no more than 20 with, at a minimum, one teacher
with high staff qualifications as outlined in paragraph (1) of this
definition;
(5) A full-day program;
(6) Inclusion of children with disabilities to ensure access to and
full participation in all opportunities;
(7) Developmentally appropriate, culturally and linguistically
responsive instruction and evidence-based curricula, and learning
environments that are aligned with the State early learning and
development standards, for at least the year prior to kindergarten
entry;
(8) Individualized accommodations and supports so that all children
can access and participate fully in learning activities;
(9) Instructional staff salaries that are comparable to the
salaries of local kindergarten through grade 12 (K-12) instructional
staff;
(10) Program evaluation to ensure continuous improvement;
(11) On-site or accessible comprehensive services for children and
community partnerships that promote families' access to services that
support their children's learning and development; and
(12) Evidence-based health and safety standards.
Reasons: Strong and consistent evidence demonstrates that
participation in high-quality early learning programs can lead to both
short- and long-term positive outcomes for all children, including
improved school readiness, lower rates of grade retention and placement
in special education, improved high school graduation rates, and
increased rates of college attendance and completion.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ See ``Investing in our Future: The Evidence Base on
Preschool Education'' (available at https://fcd-us.org/sites/default/files/Evidence%20Base%20on%20Preschool%20Education%20FINAL.pdf).
Society for Research in Child Development and the Foundation for
Child Development, October 2013.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Educational improvement strategies that focus on preschool and the
early grades can address the persistent and large achievement gaps by
race and income that are evident upon school entry, and often well-
entrenched by third grade, and that negatively affect both individual
student outcomes in later grades and overall school performance.
In ``Investing in our Future: The Evidence Base on Preschool
Education,'' published by the Society for Research in Child Development
and the Foundation for Child Development, a group of leading
researchers contend that the effects of preschool may be more
sustainable through the implementation and evaluation of policies that
increase the quality of preschool programs, facilitate alignment of
instructional practices between preschool and early elementary school,
and enhance the positive impact that parents have on their child's
development.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Traditional early elementary practice has not evolved as quickly as
new advances in the science of how children develop and learn have
emerged. Implementing a more comprehensive and aligned instructional
program that builds on the foundational processes that underlie
children's learning in the early years, such as self-regulation,
representation, memory, and attachment, can build a strong foundation
of learning that will remain with children throughout their education
and life.
To that end, the Department also proposes adopting the definition
of ``high-quality preschool program'' used in the Preschool Development
Grants program. We believe this definition is appropriate in the SIG
program as well because it includes key elements of a successful
preschool program that will lead to lasting educational gains.
In addition to the requirements focused on early learning, the
proposed early learning intervention model includes a number of
strategies that are aligned with existing transformation model
requirements. This reflects the Department's belief, based on
experience thus far with the SIG program, that the transformation model
requirements provide an appropriate framework for maximizing the
benefits of high-quality early learning while also improving student,
teacher, and school performance in the upper grades, consistent with
the SIG program's purpose to facilitate successful turnaround of the
entire school.
Modifying the Teacher and Principal Evaluation and Support System
Requirements Under the Transformation Model
Current Requirements: Under section I.A.2(d)(a)(i)(B), an LEA
implementing the transformation model must use an evaluation system for
teachers and principals that (1) takes into account data on student
growth as a significant factor as well as other factors and (2) is
designed and developed with teacher and principal involvement.
[[Page 53260]]
Proposed Requirements: Proposed section I.A.2(d)(1)(A)(ii) revises
the current requirements and would require an LEA implementing the
transformation model to implement a teacher and principal evaluation
and support system that meets the requirements for these systems under
ESEA flexibility. Specifically, under ESEA flexibility, a teacher and
principal evaluation and support system must be designed and developed
with teacher and principal involvement and must also:
(1) Be used for continual improvement of instruction;
(2) Meaningfully differentiate performance using at least three
performance levels;
(3) Use multiple valid measures in determining performance levels,
including as a significant factor data on student growth for all
students (including English learners and students with disabilities),
and other measures of professional practice (which may be gathered
through multiple formats and sources, such as observations based on
rigorous teacher performance standards, teacher portfolios, and student
and parent surveys);
(4) Evaluate teachers and principals on a regular basis;
(5) Provide clear, timely, and useful feedback, including feedback
that identifies needs and guides professional development; and
(6) Be used to inform personnel decisions.
The Department also proposes amending the definition of ``student
growth'' in section I.A.3 to align it with the definition under ESEA
flexibility, such that it is defined as the change in student
achievement for an individual student between two or more points in
time. For the purposes of the proposed definition of ``student
growth,'' ``student achievement'' would mean, (1) for grades and
subjects in which assessments are required under section 1111(b)(3) of
the ESEA, (a) a student's score on such assessments and may include (b)
other measures of student learning, provided they are rigorous and
comparable across schools within an LEA; and (2) for grades and
subjects in which assessments are not required under section 1111(b)(3)
of the ESEA, alternative measures of student learning and performance,
such as student results on pre-tests, end-of-course tests, and
objective performance-based assessments; student learning objectives;
student performance on English language proficiency assessments; and
other measures of student achievement that are rigorous and comparable
across schools within an LEA.
The Department also proposes moving current requirement
I.A.2(d)(1)(i)(D) (requiring an LEA implementing the transformation
model in a school to provide staff ongoing, high-quality professional
development that is aligned with the school's comprehensive
instructional program and designed with school staff) from the section
regarding developing and increasing teacher and school leader
effectiveness to the section regarding comprehensive instruction reform
strategies, in proposed requirement I.A.(2)(d)(2)(A)(iii).
Reasons: After publishing the current requirements, the Department
discovered that they erroneously omit certain requirements from the
teacher and principal evaluation and support system requirements in
section I.A.2(d)(1)(i)(B). Specifically, the transformation model
requires that an LEA: (1) Identify and reward school leaders, teachers,
and other staff; (2) provide staff ongoing high-quality job-embedded
professional development; and (3) implement such strategies as
financial incentives, increased opportunities for promotion and career
growth, and more flexible work conditions. The Department intended to
require that the teacher and principal evaluation and support systems
be used for those three activities but, due to a numbering error in the
current requirements, did not implement that requirement.
After the Department published the current requirements, the
Department established requirements for teacher and principal
evaluation and support systems implemented by LEAs under ESEA
flexibility. The Department believes, based on prior SIG and ESEA
flexibility implementation, that high-quality teacher and principal
evaluation and support systems that meet those requirements will
provide meaningful information about the effectiveness of teachers and
principals, can be used to inform professional development and improve
practice, and will ultimately increase the quality of instruction for
all students.
The Department proposes aligning the requirements for teacher and
principal evaluation and support systems under the SIG transformation
model with the requirements under ESEA flexibility, including the
definition of ``student growth,'' for several reasons. First, the
proposed requirement fills the gap created by the accidental omission
in the current requirements to ensure that teacher and principal
evaluation and support systems under the transformation model are used
to inform personnel decisions and professional development. Second, it
clarifies that teacher and principal evaluation and support systems
implemented as part of ESEA flexibility satisfy the requirements of the
SIG transformation model, which would reduce the burden on LEAs in SEAs
with approved ESEA flexibility requests because they would not have to
implement separate evaluation systems. Lastly, the proposal would help
to ensure consistency across Department programs.
Finally, the Department proposes moving the professional
development requirement in order to distinguish that requirement from
the requirements that pertain directly to the teacher and principal
evaluation and support systems. The proposal to move the professional
development requirement does not change in any way the requirement
itself.
Eliminating the ``Rule of Nine''
Current Requirements: Under section II.A.2(b) of the current
requirements, if an LEA has nine or more Tier I and Tier II schools,
the LEA may not implement the transformation model in more than half of
those schools (the ``rule of nine'').
Proposed Requirements: The proposed requirements eliminate the
``rule of nine.''
Reasons: The Department created the ``rule of nine'' in response to
evidence and data on school improvement practices under section 1116 of
the ESEA suggesting that turning around chronically low-performing
schools (those identified for restructuring under section
1116(b)(8)(B)(v) of the ESEA) required significant changes in
governance, leadership, and staffing. Moreover, the data suggested that
many LEAs were reluctant to make such fundamental, structural changes
in their schools, as demonstrated by the preference for the ``any other
major restructuring'' option for schools identified for restructuring,
which, despite the name, does not actually require specific changes in
school staffing, structure, or governance. The ``rule of nine'' also
was intended to help ensure that LEAs applying for SIG funds selected
intervention models for their eligible Tier I and Tier II schools on
the basis of comprehensive needs analyses reflecting the unique
characteristics and circumstances of each school, and not by simply
implementing the same model in all their eligible schools.
The Department is proposing to eliminate the ``rule of nine'' for
several reasons. First, with the addition of the three new
interventions in proposed
[[Page 53261]]
sections I.A.2(e)-(g) and the flexibility for rural LEAs in proposed
section I.B.6, the Department is proposing making the SIG program more
flexible for SEAs and LEAs. A rule limiting the specific interventions
that an LEA may implement is inconsistent with that flexibility.
Second, State-reported data on SIG interventions suggest that the
``rule of nine'' did not have an impact on which intervention models
most LEAs with nine or more Tier I and Tier II schools chose to
implement. Third, drawing on its experience of SIG implementation since
the award of fiscal year 2009 funds, the Department believes the most
important factors in selecting an appropriate model for a SIG-eligible
school are the particular circumstances and needs of the school and the
specific interventions to be implemented.
For these reasons, and as discussed in the following section, the
Department proposes requiring an LEA to demonstrate in its application
that the proposed intervention meets the specific needs of each school
it proposes to serve with SIG funds.
Adding LEA Requirement To Demonstrate Appropriateness of Chosen
Intervention Model and Take Into Consideration Family and Community
Input
Current Requirements: Under section I.A.4(a)(i) and section
II.B.2(b)(ii), an SEA must consider the extent to which an LEA's
application demonstrates that it has taken action or will take action
to analyze the needs of the schools it applies to serve. Under section
II.A.2(a)(iv), an LEA must address the extent to which it has taken
action or will take action to analyze the needs of the schools it
applies to serve in its application to the SEA.
Proposed Requirements: The Department proposes revising the needs
analysis requirement in section I.A.4(a)(1) to provide that an SEA must
take into account the extent to which an LEA (1) includes a
demonstration in its application that the intervention selected for
each eligible school is designed to meet the specific needs of the
school, based on a needs analysis that, among other things, analyzes
the school improvement needs identified by families and the community,
and (2) takes into consideration family and community input in
selecting the intervention for each school.
Reasons: Although under the current requirements an LEA is required
to address the needs of its SIG-eligible schools, there is no
requirement that the LEA demonstrate that the intervention selected is
the most appropriate option for meeting the specific needs of the
school. There is also no current requirement that the needs analysis
must reflect the needs identified based on family and community input.
Although currently allowable, in order to ensure that an LEA implements
an appropriate intervention for each school it proposes to serve with
SIG funds and that input from families and the community is taken into
consideration when selecting an intervention, the Department proposes
to require the SEA to consider the extent to which the LEA has
demonstrated that the selected intervention responds to the particular
circumstances and needs of the school, taking into consideration family
and community input.
Adding LEA Requirement to Continuously Engage Families and the
Community Throughout Implementation
Current Requirements: Although under section I.A.2(d)(3)(A)(ii) of
the current requirements an LEA implementing the transformation model
must provide ongoing mechanisms for family and community engagement, no
similar requirement regarding family and community engagement applies
to all LEAs that receive SIG funds, regardless of the intervention
model implemented.
Proposed Requirements: The Department proposes adding section
I.A.4(a)(8) (Evidence of strongest commitment), which would require an
SEA to consider the extent to which the LEA's application demonstrates
how the LEA will meaningfully engage families and the community in the
implementation of the intervention on an ongoing basis.
Reasons: Family and community engagement in selecting an
intervention is important for ensuring local support for a successful
turnaround, as reflected in proposed requirement I.A.4(a)(1). However,
ongoing family and community engagement is also essential to support
student learning and ensure effective implementation of reform
strategies. Families and community organizations are key partners in
creating a culture of achievement and addressing students' social,
emotional, and health needs.
Adding LEA Requirement to Monitor and Support Intervention
Implementation
Current Requirements: None.
Proposed Requirements: The Department proposes adding section
I.A.4(a)(7) (Evidence of strongest commitment) to require an SEA to
consider the extent to which the LEA's application demonstrates how the
LEA will provide effective oversight and support for implementation of
interventions in its schools by, for example, creating an LEA
turnaround office.
Reasons: Through monitoring and interaction with LEAs and SEAs, the
Department has found that LEA-level activities and structures are key
to supporting a successful school turnaround. The proposed requirements
would ensure that LEAs focus on monitoring and supporting turnaround
efforts in their schools, including establishing or modifying their
governance structures.
Adding LEA Requirements to Regularly Review External Providers'
Performance and Hold External Providers Accountable
Current Requirements: Under section I.A.4(a)(iii) and section
II.B.2(b)(ii), an SEA must consider the extent to which an LEA's
application demonstrates that an LEA has recruited, screened, and
selected (or will recruit, screen, and select) external providers, if
applicable, to ensure their quality. Under section II.A.2(a)(iv), an
LEA must address in its application to the SEA the extent to which it
has recruited, screened, and selected (or will recruit, screen, and
select) external providers, if applicable, to ensure their quality.
Under section II.A.9, an LEA that implements a restart model must hold
the charter school operator, charter management organization (CMO), or
education management organization (EMO) accountable for meeting the SIG
requirements.
Proposed Requirements: The Department proposes several changes to
the provision regarding the recruitment, screening, and selection of
external providers. Specifically, in proposed section I.A.4(a)(4)
(Evidence of strongest commitment), in addition to the current
requirement that an SEA consider the extent to which the LEA's
application demonstrates that the LEA will recruit, screen, and select
external providers to ensure their quality, we would require an SEA to
consider the extent to which the LEA's application demonstrates that
the LEA will regularly review the external provider's performance and
hold the external provider accountable for its performance. Finally, in
proposed section II.A.9, the Department proposes requiring an LEA to
hold an external provider accountable for meeting the SIG requirements,
regardless of which model the LEA is implementing.
Reasons: Although under the current requirements an SEA must
consider the extent to which the LEA will screen and
[[Page 53262]]
select external providers, there is no requirement that the SEA
consider how an LEA will review external provider performance or hold
external providers accountable for their performance. By requiring that
LEAs take a performance management approach to working with external
providers, the Department is helping to ensure that providers are
fulfilling the obligations under their memoranda of understanding
(MOUs), contracts, or other agreements and are held accountable for
contributing to increased student achievement in schools that are
implementing a SIG model. The Department expects that, to meet the
proposed requirement, an LEA will include, in an MOU, contract, or
other agreement with a provider, the LEA's expectations for how the
provider will perform and be evaluated throughout the period of the
grant.
Clarifying Rigorous Review Process Under the Restart Model
Current Requirements: Under section I.A.2(b), an LEA may use funds
to implement the restart model, under which the LEA converts a school
or closes and reopens a school under a charter school operator, a CMO,
or an EMO that has been selected through a rigorous review process. The
current requirements do not specify the criteria for such a review, nor
do they expressly establish a role for the SEA in the review and
selection of the restart partner.
Proposed Requirements: The Department proposes adding section
I.A.4(a)(11) (Evidence of strongest commitment), which would require an
SEA to consider the extent to which the LEA's application demonstrates
that it will conduct a rigorous review process in selecting the charter
school operator, CMO, or EMO to operate or manage the school or schools
it proposes to serve with SIG funds. Under the proposed requirements in
section I.A.2(b)(1), the rigorous review process must include a
determination by the LEA that the charter school operator, CMO, or EMO
is likely to produce strong results for the school. In making that
determination, the LEA must consider the extent to which the schools
currently operated or managed by the selected charter school operator,
CMO, or EMO, if any, have produced strong results over the past three
years (or over the life of the school or schools, if open for fewer
than three years), including--
(1) Significant improvement in academic achievement for the groups
of students described in section 1111(b)(2)(C)(v) of the ESEA;
(2) Success in closing achievement gaps, either within schools or
relative to all public elementary school and secondary school students
statewide, for all of the groups of students described in section
1111(b)(2)(C)(v)(II) of the ESEA;
(3) High school graduation rates, where applicable, that are above
the average rates in the State for the groups of students described in
section 1111(b)(2)(C)(v) of the ESEA; and
(4) No significant compliance issues, including in the areas of
civil rights, financial management, and student safety.
Reasons: The Department believes that additional safeguards beyond
those in the current requirements are needed to ensure that LEAs
implementing a restart model do so in a manner that is likely to result
in improved academic achievement and attainment outcomes for students.
Specifically, we believe that the recent performance of schools
currently operated or managed by an LEA's restart partner is a key
predictor of success that must be considered, as research indicates
that schools opened by a CMO or EMO typically perform at a level
similar to the average of the other schools managed by that
organization.\9\
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\9\ Woodworth, J. and Raymond, M. (2013). Charter School Growth
and Replication: Volume II. Stanford, CA: Center for Research on
Education Outcomes, Stanford University.
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The four factors the Department proposes requiring an LEA to
consider in determining whether a charter school operator, CMO, or EMO
has produced strong results are aligned with the factors that we have
used over the last several years in the definition of ``high-quality
charter school'' for the Charter Schools Program Grants for Replication
and Expansion of High-Quality Charter Schools. We believe these factors
are appropriate for use in the SIG program as well because they involve
the key criteria that should be used when considering the past
performance of a charter school operator, CMO, or EMO as it pertains to
student achievement, other educational outcomes, and important areas of
compliance.\10\
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\10\ See the notice of final priorities, requirements,
definitions, and selection criteria for this program, published in
the Federal Register on July 12, 2011 (76 FR 40898).
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We note that the proposed requirements would not preclude an LEA
from considering other factors in determining whether an LEA's selected
charter school operator, CMO, or EMO is likely to produce strong
results for the school. They also would not prevent an LEA from
selecting a charter school operator, CMO, or EMO that does not
currently operate or manage any schools. However, we expect an SEA to
use caution in awarding SIG funds to an LEA that selects an entity that
does not have a record of producing strong results.
Clarifying Renewal Criteria
Current Requirements: Under section II.C, an SEA must renew an
LEA's grant if the LEA demonstrates that its schools are meeting
student achievement goals in reading/language arts and mathematics and
may renew an LEA's grant if the SEA determines that the LEA's schools
are making progress toward those goals.
Proposed Requirements: Section II.C.2 of the proposed requirements
sets forth the following two additional factors an SEA may consider
when making grant renewal decisions for an LEA with SIG-funded schools
that have not met student achievement goals or for which the SEA does
not have sufficient data to determine whether student achievement goals
have been met: (1) Whether the LEA's schools are making progress on the
leading indicators in section III and (2) whether the LEA is
implementing interventions in its schools with fidelity to applicable
requirements and to its application. Section II.C.6 of the proposed
requirements also clarifies that nothing in the requirements would
diminish an SEA's authority to take appropriate enforcement action with
respect to an LEA that is not complying with the terms of its grant.
Reasons: Many SEAs do not have sufficient data to determine whether
an LEA's schools have met their student achievement goals at the time
of grant renewal decisions. To address this issue, the Department has
proposed additional factors relevant to an LEA's performance that the
SEA may consider. These additional criteria would help an SEA determine
whether a school without achievement data is likely to be successful in
improving student achievement by the end of its grant period.
To eliminate any misconception that the requirements that pertain
to grant renewal might preclude the SEA from taking appropriate
enforcement actions, the Department has also included language to
clarify that an SEA would retain its enforcement authority, up to and
including terminating an LEA's subgrant.
Defining ``Greatest Need'' To Include Priority and Focus Schools for
SEAs With Approved ESEA Flexibility Requests
Current Requirements: Under section I.A, an SEA may award SIG funds
to LEAs with the greatest need for such funds, defined as LEAs that
have Tier I, Tier II, or Tier III schools, as defined in
[[Page 53263]]
the current requirements. The current requirements do not address
schools identified through an SEA's approved ESEA flexibility request
as priority or focus schools.
Proposed Requirements: Section I.A.1 of the proposed requirements
revises the existing definition of ``greatest need'' to include, for an
SEA with an approved ESEA flexibility request, priority schools and
focus schools identified pursuant to the SEA's approved ESEA
flexibility request and consistent with the definitions of those
schools under ESEA flexibility.\11\
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\11\ Under ESEA flexibility, ``priority school'' is defined as a
school that, based on the most recent data available, has been
identified as among the lowest-performing schools in the State. The
total number of priority schools in a State must be at least five
percent of the title I schools in the State. A priority school is--
A school among the lowest five percent of title I schools in the
State based on the achievement of the ``all students'' group in
terms of proficiency on the statewide assessments that are part of
the SEA's differentiated recognition, accountability, and support
system, combined, and has demonstrated a lack of progress on those
assessments over a number of years in the ``all students'' group;
A title I-participating or title I-eligible high school with a
graduation rate less than 60 percent over a number of years; or
A Tier I or Tier II school under the SIG program that is using
SIG funds to implement a school intervention model.
Under ESEA flexibility, ``focus school'' is defined as a title I
school in the State that, based on the most recent data available,
is contributing to the achievement gap in the State. The total
number of focus schools in a State must equal at least 10 percent of
the title I schools in the State. A focus school is--
A school that has the largest within-school gaps between the
highest-achieving subgroup or subgroups and the lowest-achieving
subgroup or subgroups or, at the high school level, has the largest
within-school gaps in graduation rates; or
A school that has a subgroup or subgroups with low achievement
or, at the high school level, low graduation rates.
An SEA must also identify as a focus school a title I high
school with a graduation rate less than 60 percent over a number of
years that is not identified as a priority school.
These determinations must be based on the achievement and lack
of progress over a number of years of one or more subgroups of
students identified under ESEA section 1111(b)(2)(C)(v)(II) in terms
of proficiency on the statewide assessments that are part of the
SEA's differentiated recognition, accountability, and support
system, combined, or, at the high school level, graduation rates for
one or more subgroups. See the document ESEA Flexibility, updated
June 7, 2012, available at https://www2.ed.gov/policy/elsec/guid/esea-flexibility/.
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The proposed requirements include conforming references to priority
and focus schools throughout to clarify that the relevant requirements
that pertain to Tier I and Tier II schools apply to both priority and
focus schools, with the following exceptions: (1) Proposed section
II.A.4(a) requires an LEA to serve each priority school unless the LEA
demonstrates it lacks sufficient capacity to do so; (2) proposed
section II.A.7 precludes an LEA with one or more priority schools from
applying to serve one or more focus schools if it has not applied to
serve all of its priority schools; and (3) proposed section II.B.7
requires an SEA to give priority to LEAs that apply to serve priority
schools, if the SEA does not have sufficient SIG funds to make at least
three-year awards to each LEA that submits an approvable application.
Reasons: Through waivers granted as part of ESEA flexibility and
through the State SIG application process, most SEAs with approved ESEA
flexibility requests have replaced their lists of Tier I, Tier II, and
Tier III schools with lists of priority schools that were identified in
accordance with their approved ESEA flexibility requests. These waivers
are necessary because, under ESEA flexibility, most SEAs no longer make
AYP determinations or identify title I schools in improvement,
corrective action, or restructuring. Therefore, these SEAs are unable
to identify a sufficient number of schools that meet the definitions of
Tier I, Tier II, and Tier III schools. The proposed requirements would
require SEAs with approved ESEA flexibility requests to award SIG funds
to LEAs with priority and focus schools instead of Tier I, Tier II, or
Tier III schools and would eliminate the need for an SEA to seek a
waiver from the Department to serve those schools.
The proposed requirements treat both priority and focus schools
like Tier I and Tier II schools except that, under the proposed
requirements, an LEA must apply to serve all of its priority schools
before it may apply to serve its focus schools and an SEA must award
funds to serve each priority school its LEAs commit to serve before
awarding funds to LEAs to serve focus schools. (Under the current
requirements, an SEA must award funds to serve each Tier I and Tier II
school its LEAs commit to serve before awarding funds to LEAs to serve
Tier III schools.) Priority schools identified in accordance with ESEA
flexibility are the lowest-performing schools in the State. Although
focus schools identified under ESEA flexibility are schools
contributing to the achievement gap in their State, the Department
believes that SIG funds must first be used to implement intervention
models in the schools that are the lowest-performing overall.
Clarifying Flexibility for Previously Implemented Interventions (In
Whole or In Part)
Current Requirements: Under section I.B.1, an SEA may award SIG
funds to an LEA that has previously implemented, in whole or in part,
an intervention that meets the requirements for the turnaround model,
restart model, or transformation model within the last two years.
Proposed Requirements: The proposed requirements revise section
I.B.1 of the current requirements to make clear that an SEA may fund an
LEA that implemented an intervention, in whole or in part, during the
school year in which the LEA applies for SIG funds or during the two
school years prior to the school year in which the LEA applies for SIG
funds.
The proposed requirements also clarify that the flexibility in
section I.B.1 of the current requirements applies to the three new
intervention models discussed in this document--the evidence-based,
whole-school reform strategy, the early learning model, and the
approved State-determined model.
Reasons: The reference in the current requirements to interventions
implemented within ``the last two years'' has created confusion among
States. The Department has provided guidance to States on how to
determine if an intervention that was previously implemented falls
within section I.B.1 of the current requirements.\12\ The proposed
requirements are consistent with that guidance. Consistent with the
purpose of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014, the proposed
requirements would also expand this flexibility regarding previously
implemented interventions to apply to the three newly eligible
interventions.
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\12\ See Frequently Asked Question G-1a in ``Guidance on Fiscal
Year 2010 School Improvement Grants Under Section 1003(g) of the
Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965,'' dated March 1,
2012, available at
https://www2.ed.gov/programs/sif/legislation.html.
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Revising Reporting Requirements
Current Requirements: Under section III, ``Reporting and
Evaluation,'' an SEA is required to report certain data with respect to
schools served by the SIG program, including truancy data. For each
metric, the current requirements identify the authority under which the
Department collects the data. Some of the data is collected through
EDFacts. However, the current requirements identify the State Fiscal
Stabilization Fund (SFSF) as the authority for collecting data for two
of the metrics--college-enrollment rates and distribution of teachers
by performance level on an LEA's teacher evaluation system.
Proposed Requirements: Section III.A of the proposed requirements
would
[[Page 53264]]
make three changes and a number of clarifications to the reporting
requirements. First, we would remove from the chart under section
III.A.3 of the proposed requirements the metric for ``Truants'' and
replace it with ``Chronic absenteeism rates.'' Second, we would remove
from the chart under proposed section III.A the references to SFSF data
as a source for collecting data. Lastly, we would clarify in the chart
under proposed section III.A.3 the correct source for each of the
required metrics.
Reasons: Truancy is defined at the State level. As a result, the
data the Department has collected on truancy are not comparable across
States and are of limited utility. For this reason, the Department
proposes replacing the truancy data reporting requirement with a
requirement to report data on ``chronic absenteeism,'' defined in the
Department's Civil Rights Data Collection as the unduplicated number of
students absent 15 or more school days during the school year. See
https://www.regulations.gov/contentStreamer?objectId=0900006481337396&disposition=attachment&contentType=pdf and https://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/docs/crdc-2013-14-p1-p4.doc. This definition of ``chronic absenteeism'' applies across
all LEAs and would ensure that the data are consistent among all
States. We believe this approach would more effectively assist the
Department, States, and the public in determining the impact that SIG
funds have on a key attendance metric across States. Finally, we would
remove the reference to SFSF as a source for some of the data because
it is no longer an active program.
Clarifying SEA Requirements for Posting LEA SIG Applications
Current Requirements: Under section II.B.3, an SEA must post on its
Web site all final LEA applications and specific information pertaining
to the grants.
Proposed Requirements: Section II.B.6 of the proposed requirements
clarifies that an SEA must post all LEA applications, including
applications to serve Tier III schools. Additionally, if an LEA amends
an application, the SEA would be required to post the amended
application.
Reasons: Although the current requirements state that an SEA must
post ``all final LEA applications,'' the Department has found that many
SEAs do not post LEA applications to serve Tier III schools or amended
applications. The proposed requirements are intended to eliminate any
confusion and to ensure that SEAs are providing the public with
complete information on LEA applications for SIG funds.
Removing References to Fiscal Year 2009 and Fiscal Year 2010 Funds
Current Requirements: Section II.B contains multiple requirements
pertaining to the disbursement of fiscal years 2009 and 2010 funds.
Section II.E allows SEAs to reserve no more than five percent of their
fiscal year 2009 SIG allocation if the total allocation exceeded the
total allowable amount for awards to LEAs.
Proposed Requirements: Section II.B of the proposed requirements
would remove references to fiscal years 2009 and 2010 funds. The
proposed requirements would remove section II.E.
Reasons: The current requirements for the SIG program were
published to incorporate authority in the Consolidated Appropriations
Act, 2010, which was applicable to funds appropriated under the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) and fiscal year
2010 funds. The SIG funds allocated under ARRA were significantly
greater than the fiscal year 2010 allocation and each subsequent
allocation. For that reason, the Department included specific SEA
requirements to direct the disbursement of the ARRA funds and the
fiscal year 2010 funds, including the current requirement in section
II.E that allowed SEAs to reserve no more than five percent of their
fiscal year 2009 SIG allocation if the total allocation exceeded the
total allowable amount for awards to LEAs. The period of availability
of the ARRA funds and the fiscal year 2010 funds has expired and,
therefore, references to the fiscal year 2009 and 2010 funds in the
current requirements are no longer necessary.
Removing Reference to Differentiated Accountability Pilot
Current Requirements: Section II.B.11 sets forth requirements for
SEAs participating in the ``differentiated accountability pilot.''
Proposed Requirements: The proposed requirements would remove the
current requirement pertaining to the differentiated accountability
pilot in section II.B.11.
Reasons: The ``differentiated accountability pilot'' no longer
operates. Accordingly, any reference to it is obsolete and should be
removed.
Technical Edits
The Department has made a number of technical edits to clarify
current requirements where appropriate. We have also renumbered the
provisions in the requirements for internal consistency.
Proposed Requirements
The Secretary proposes the following requirements, which amend the
SIG final requirements, published in the Federal Register on October
28, 2010 (75 FR 66363), and incorporate the proposed changes described
above:
I. SEA Priorities in Awarding School Improvement Grants
A. Defining key terms. To award School Improvement Grants to its
LEAs, consistent with section 1003(g)(6) of the ESEA, an SEA must
select those LEAs with the greatest need for such funds, in accordance
with the requirements in paragraph I.A.1. From among the LEAs in
greatest need, the SEA must select, in accordance with paragraph I.A.2,
those LEAs that demonstrate the strongest commitment to ensuring that
the funds are used to provide adequate resources to enable the lowest-
achieving schools to improve academic achievement. Key terms are
defined as follows:
1. Greatest need. An LEA with the greatest need for a School
Improvement Grant must have one or more schools in at least one of the
categories described in section I.A.1(a)-(c), except that an LEA with
the greatest need for a School Improvement Grant in a State with an
approved ESEA flexibility request must have one or more schools in at
least one of the categories described in section I.A.1(d)-(e):
(a) Tier I schools:
(1) A Tier I school is a title I school in improvement, corrective
action, or restructuring that is identified by the SEA under paragraph
(a)(1) of the definition of ``persistently lowest-achieving schools.''
(2) At its option, an SEA may also identify as a Tier I school an
elementary school that is eligible for title I, Part A funds that--
(A)(i) Has not made adequate yearly progress for at least two
consecutive years; or
(ii) Is in the State's lowest quintile of performance based on
proficiency rates on the State's assessments under section 1111(b)(3)
of the ESEA in reading/language arts and mathematics combined; and
(B) Is no higher achieving than the highest-achieving school
identified by the SEA under paragraph (a)(1)(A) of the definition of
``persistently lowest-achieving schools.''
(b) Tier II schools:
(1) A Tier II school is a secondary school that is eligible for,
but does not receive, title I, Part A funds and is identified by the
SEA under paragraph
[[Page 53265]]
(a)(2) of the definition of ``persistently lowest-achieving schools.''
(2) At its option, an SEA may also identify as a Tier II school a
secondary school that is eligible for title I, Part A funds that--
(A)(i) Has not made adequate yearly progress for at least two
consecutive years; or
(ii) Is in the State's lowest quintile of performance based on
proficiency rates on the State's assessments under section 1111(b)(3)
of the ESEA in reading/language arts and mathematics combined; and
(B)(i) Is no higher achieving than the highest-achieving school
identified by the SEA under paragraph (a)(2)(A) of the definition of
``persistently lowest-achieving schools''; or
(ii) Is a high school that has had a graduation rate as defined in
34 CFR 200.19(b) that is less than 60 percent over a number of years.
(c) Tier III schools:
(1) A Tier III school is a title I school in improvement,
corrective action, or restructuring that is not a Tier I or a Tier II
school.
(2) At its option, an SEA may also identify as a Tier III school a
school that is eligible for title I, Part A funds that--
(A)(i) Has not made adequate yearly progress for at least two
years; or
(ii) Is in the State's lowest quintile of performance based on
proficiency rates on the State's assessments under section 1111(b)(3)
of the ESEA in reading/language arts and mathematics combined; and
(B) Does not meet the requirements to be a Tier I or Tier II
school.
(3) An SEA may establish additional criteria to use in setting
priorities among LEA applications for funding and to encourage LEAs to
differentiate among Tier III schools in their use of School Improvement
Grants funds.
(d) Priority schools: A priority school is a school identified as a
priority school pursuant to an SEA's approved ESEA flexibility request
and consistent with the ESEA flexibility definition of priority
school.\13\
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\13\ A ``priority school'' is defined as a school that, based on
the most recent data available, has been identified as among the
lowest-performing schools in the State. The total number of priority
schools in a State must be at least five percent of the title I
schools in the State. A priority school is--
A school among the lowest five percent of title I schools in the
State based on the achievement of the ``all students'' group in
terms of proficiency on the statewide assessments that are part of
the SEA's differentiated recognition, accountability, and support
system, combined, and has demonstrated a lack of progress on those
assessments over a number of years in the ``all students'' group;
A title I-participating or title I-eligible high school with a
graduation rate less than 60 percent over a number of years; or
A Tier I or Tier II school under the SIG program that is using
SIG funds to implement a school intervention model.
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(e) Focus schools: A focus school is a school identified as a focus
school pursuant to an SEA's approved ESEA flexibility request and
consistent with the ESEA flexibility definition of focus school.\14\
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\14\ A ``focus school'' is defined as a title I school in the
State that, based on the most recent data available, is contributing
to the achievement gap in the State. The total number of focus
schools in a State must equal at least 10 percent of the title I
schools in the State. A focus school is--
A school that has the largest within-school gaps between the
highest-achieving subgroup or subgroups and the lowest-achieving
subgroup or subgroups or, at the high school level, has the largest
within-school gaps in graduation rates; or
A school that has a subgroup or subgroups with low achievement
or, at the high school level, low graduation rates.
An SEA must also identify as a focus school a title I high
school with a graduation rate less than 60 percent over a number of
years that is not identified as a priority school.
These determinations must be based on the achievement and lack
of progress over a number of years of one or more subgroups of
students identified under ESEA section 1111(b)(2)(C)(v)(II) in terms
of proficiency on the statewide assessments that are part of the
SEA's differentiated recognition, accountability, and support
system, combined, or, at the high school level, graduation rates for
one or more subgroups.
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2. Strongest Commitment. An LEA with the strongest commitment is an
LEA that agrees to implement, and demonstrates the capacity to
implement fully and effectively, one of the following rigorous
interventions in each Tier I and Tier II school or, for an SEA with an
approved ESEA flexibility request, each priority and focus school, that
the LEA commits to serve:
(a) Turnaround model:
(1) A turnaround model is one in which an LEA must implement each
of the following elements:
(A) Replace the principal and grant the principal sufficient
operational flexibility (including in staffing, calendars/time, and
budgeting) to implement fully each element of the turnaround model.
(B) Using locally adopted competencies to measure the effectiveness
of staff who can work within the turnaround environment to meet the
needs of students--
(i) Screen all existing staff and rehire no more than 50 percent;
and
(ii) Select new staff.
(C) Implement such strategies as financial incentives, increased
opportunities for promotion and career growth, and more flexible work
conditions that are designed to recruit, place, and retain staff with
the skills necessary to meet the needs of the students in the
turnaround school.
(D) Provide staff ongoing, high-quality, job-embedded professional
development that is aligned with the school's comprehensive
instructional program and designed with school staff to ensure that
they are equipped to facilitate effective teaching and learning and
have the capacity to successfully implement school reform strategies.
(E) Adopt a new governance structure, which may include, but is not
limited to, requiring the school to report to a new ``turnaround
office'' in the LEA or SEA, hire a ``turnaround leader'' who reports
directly to the Superintendent or Chief Academic Officer, or enter into
a multi-year contract with the LEA or SEA to obtain added flexibility
in exchange for greater accountability.
(F) Use data to identify and implement an instructional program
that is research-based and vertically aligned from one grade to the
next as well as aligned with State academic standards.
(G) Promote the continuous use of student data (such as from
formative, interim, and summative assessments) to inform and
differentiate instruction in order to meet the academic needs of
individual students.
(H) Establish schedules and implement strategies that provide
increased learning time (as defined in these requirements).
(I) Provide appropriate social-emotional and community-oriented
services and supports for students.
(2) A turnaround model may also implement other strategies such
as--
(A) Any of the required and permissible activities under the
transformation model; or
(B) A new school model (e.g., themed, dual language academy).
(b) Restart model:
(1) A restart model is one in which an LEA converts a school or
closes and reopens a school under a charter school operator, a charter
management organization (CMO), or an education management organization
(EMO) that has been selected through a rigorous review process. (A CMO
is a non-profit organization that operates or manages charter schools
by centralizing or sharing certain functions and resources among
schools. An EMO is a for-profit or non-profit organization that
provides ``whole-school operation'' services to an LEA.) The rigorous
review process must include a determination by the LEA that the
selected charter school operator, CMO, or EMO is likely to produce
strong results for the school. In making this determination, the LEA
must consider the extent to which the schools currently operated or
managed by the selected charter school operator, CMO, or EMO, if any,
have produced strong results over the past three years (or over
[[Page 53266]]
the life of the school, if the school has been open for fewer than
three years), including--
(A) Significant improvement in academic achievement for all of the
groups of students described in section 1111(b)(2)(C)(v) of the ESEA;
(B) Success in closing achievement gaps, either within schools or
relative to all public elementary school and secondary school students
statewide, for all of the groups of students described in section
1111(b)(2)(C)(v)(II) of the ESEA;
(C) High school graduation rates, where applicable, that are above
the average rates in the State for the groups of students described in
section 1111(b)(2)(C)(v) of the ESEA; and
(D) No significant compliance issues, including in the areas of
civil rights, financial management, and student safety;
(2) A restart model must enroll, within the grades it serves, any
former student who wishes to attend the school.
(c) School closure: School closure occurs when an LEA closes a
school and enrolls the students who attended that school in other
schools in the LEA that are higher achieving. These other schools
should be within reasonable proximity to the closed school and may
include, but are not limited to, charter schools or new schools for
which achievement data are not yet available.
(d) Transformation model: A transformation model is one in which an
LEA implements each of the following elements:
(1) Developing and increasing teacher and school leader
effectiveness.
(A) Required activities. The LEA must--
(i) Replace the principal who led the school prior to commencement
of the transformation model;
(ii) Implement rigorous, transparent, and equitable evaluation and
support systems for teachers and principals, designed and developed
with teacher and principal involvement, that--
(1) Will be used for continual improvement of instruction;
(2) Meaningfully differentiate performance using at least three
performance levels;
(3) Use multiple valid measures in determining performance levels,
including as a significant factor data on student growth (as defined in
these requirements) for all students (including English learners and
students with disabilities), and other measures of professional
practice (which may be gathered through multiple formats and sources),
such as observations based on rigorous teacher performance standards,
teacher portfolios, and student and parent surveys;
(4) Evaluate teachers and principals on a regular basis;
(5) Provide clear, timely, and useful feedback, including feedback
that identifies needs and guides professional development; and
(6) Will be used to inform personnel decisions.
(iii) Use the teacher and principal evaluation and support system
described in section I.A.2(d)(1)(A)(ii) of these requirements to
identify and reward school leaders, teachers, and other staff who, in
implementing this model, have increased student achievement and high
school graduation rates and identify and remove those who, after ample
opportunities have been provided for them to improve their professional
practice, have not done so; and
(iv) Implement such strategies as financial incentives, increased
opportunities for promotion and career growth, and more flexible work
conditions that are designed to recruit, place, and retain staff with
the skills necessary to meet the needs of students in the school,
taking into consideration the results from the teacher and principal
evaluation and support system described in section I.A.2(d)(1)(A)(ii)
of these requirements, if applicable.
(B) Permissible activities. An LEA may also implement other
strategies to develop teachers' and school leaders' effectiveness, such
as--
(i) Providing additional compensation to attract and retain staff
with the skills necessary to meet the needs of the students in a
transformation school;
(ii) Instituting a system for measuring changes in instructional
practices resulting from professional development; or
(iii) Ensuring that the school is not required to accept a teacher
without the mutual consent of the teacher and principal, regardless of
the teacher's seniority.
(2) Comprehensive instructional reform strategies.
(A) Required activities. The LEA must--
(i) Use data to identify and implement an instructional program
that is research-based and vertically aligned from one grade to the
next as well as aligned with State academic standards;
(ii) Promote the continuous use of student data (such as from
formative, interim, and summative assessments) to inform and
differentiate instruction in order to meet the academic needs of
individual students; and
(iii) Provide staff ongoing, high-quality, job-embedded
professional development (e.g., regarding subject-specific pedagogy,
instruction that reflects a deeper understanding of the community
served by the school, or differentiated instruction) that is aligned
with the school's comprehensive instructional program and designed with
school staff to ensure they are equipped to facilitate effective
teaching and learning and have the capacity to implement successfully
school reform strategies.
(B) Permissible activities. An LEA may also implement comprehensive
instructional reform strategies, such as--
(i) Conducting periodic reviews to ensure that the instruction is
implemented with fidelity to the selected curriculum, is having the
intended impact on student achievement, and is modified if ineffective;
(ii) Implementing a schoolwide ``response-to-intervention'' model;
(iii) Providing additional supports and professional development to
teachers and principals in order to implement effective strategies to
support students with disabilities in the least restrictive environment
and to ensure that English learners acquire language skills to master
academic content;
(iv) Using and integrating technology-based supports and
interventions as part of the instructional program; and
(v) In secondary schools--
(1) Increasing rigor by offering opportunities for students to
enroll in advanced coursework (such as Advanced Placement;
International Baccalaureate; or science, technology, engineering, and
mathematics courses, especially those that incorporate rigorous and
relevant project-, inquiry-, or design-based contextual learning
opportunities), early-college high schools, dual enrollment programs,
or thematic learning academies that prepare students for college and
careers, including by providing appropriate supports designed to ensure
that low-achieving students can take advantage of these programs and
coursework;
(2) Improving student transition from middle to high school through
summer transition programs or freshman academies;
(3) Increasing graduation rates through, for example, credit-
recovery programs, re-engagement strategies, smaller learning
communities, competency-based instruction and performance-based
assessments, and acceleration of basic reading and mathematics skills;
or
(4) Establishing early-warning systems to identify students who may
be at risk
[[Page 53267]]
of failing to achieve to high standards or graduate.
(3) Increasing learning time and creating community-oriented
schools.
(A) Required activities. The LEA must--
(i) Establish schedules and strategies that provide increased
learning time (as defined in these requirements); and
(ii) Provide ongoing mechanisms for family and community
engagement.
(B) Permissible activities. An LEA may also implement other
strategies that extend learning time and create community-oriented
schools, such as--
(i) Partnering with parents and parent organizations, faith- and
community-based organizations, health clinics, other State or local
agencies, and others to create safe school environments that meet
students' social, emotional, and health needs;
(ii) Extending or restructuring the school day so as to add time
for such strategies as advisory periods that build relationships
between students, faculty, and other school staff;
(iii) Implementing approaches to improve school climate and
discipline, such as implementing a system of positive behavioral
supports or taking steps to eliminate bullying and student harassment;
or
(iv) Expanding the school program to offer full-day kindergarten or
pre-kindergarten.
(4) Providing operational flexibility and sustained support.
(A) Required activities. The LEA must--
(i) Give the school sufficient operational flexibility (such as
staffing, calendars/time, and budgeting) to implement fully each
element of the transformation model to substantially improve student
achievement outcomes and increase high school graduation rates; and
(ii) Ensure that the school receives ongoing, intensive technical
assistance and related support from the LEA, the SEA, or a designated
external lead partner organization (such as a school turnaround
organization or an EMO).
(B) Permissible activities. The LEA may also implement other
strategies for providing operational flexibility and intensive support,
such as--
(i) Allowing the school to be run under a new governance
arrangement, such as a turnaround division within the LEA or SEA; or
(ii) Implementing a per-pupil, school-based budget formula that is
weighted based on student needs.
(e) Evidence-based, whole-school reform strategy: An evidence-
based, whole-school reform strategy is a strategy that--
(1) Is supported by evidence of effectiveness, which must include
at least two studies of the strategy, each of which--
(A) Meets What Works Clearinghouse evidence standards with or
without reservations;\15\ and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ What Works Clearinghouse Procedures and Standards Handbook
(Version 3.0), which can currently be found at the following link:
https://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/pdf/referenceresources/
wwcproceduresv30standards
handbook.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(B) Found a statistically significant favorable impact on a student
academic achievement or attainment outcome, with no statistically
significant and overriding unfavorable impacts on that outcome for
relevant populations in the study or in other studies of the
intervention reviewed by and reported on by the What Works
Clearinghouse;
(2) Is a whole-school reform strategy as defined in these
requirements; and
(3) Is implemented by the LEA in partnership with a strategy
developer as defined in these requirements.
(f) Early learning model: An LEA implementing the early learning
model in an elementary school must--
(1) Implement each of the following early learning strategies--
(A) Offer full-day kindergarten;
(B) Establish or expand a high-quality preschool program (as
defined in these requirements);
(C) Provide educators, including preschool teachers, with time for
joint planning across grades to facilitate effective teaching and
learning and positive teacher-student interactions.
(2) Replace the principal who led the school prior to commencement
of the early learning model;
(3) Implement rigorous, transparent, and equitable evaluation and
support systems for teachers and principals, designed and developed
with teacher and principal involvement, that meet the requirements
described in section I.A.2(d)(1)(A)(ii);
(4) Use the teacher and principal evaluation and support system
described in section I.A.2(d)(1)(A)(ii) of these requirements to
identify and reward school leaders, teachers, and other staff who, in
implementing this model, have increased student achievement and
identify and remove those who, after ample opportunities have been
provided for them to improve their professional practice, have not done
so;
(5) Implement such strategies as financial incentives, increased
opportunities for promotion and career growth, and more flexible work
conditions that are designed to recruit, place, and retain staff with
the skills necessary to meet the needs of students in the school,
taking into consideration the results from the teacher and principal
evaluation and support system described in section I.A.2(d)(1)(A)(ii)
of these requirements, if applicable;
(6) Use data to identify and implement an instructional program
that--
(A) Is research-based, developmentally appropriate, and vertically
aligned from one grade to the next as well as aligned with State early
learning and development standards and State academic standards and
(B) In the early grades, promotes the full range of academic
content across domains of development, including math and science,
language and literacy, socio-emotional skills, self-regulation, and
executive functions;
(7) Promote the continuous use of student data (such as from
formative, interim, and summative assessments) to inform and
differentiate instruction in order to meet the educational and
developmental needs of individual students; and
(8) Provide staff ongoing, high-quality, job-embedded professional
development such as coaching and mentoring (e.g., regarding subject-
specific pedagogy, instruction that reflects a deeper understanding of
the community served by the school, or differentiated instruction) that
is aligned with the school's comprehensive instructional program and
designed with school staff to ensure they are equipped to facilitate
effective teaching and learning and have the capacity to implement
successfully school reform strategies.
(g) Approved State-Determined Model: An LEA may implement an
intervention developed or adopted by its SEA that has been approved by
the Secretary, consistent with section II.B.1(b).
3. Definitions.
High-quality preschool program means an early learning program that
includes structural elements that are evidence-based and nationally
recognized as important for ensuring program quality, including at a
minimum--
(a) High staff qualifications, including a teacher with a
bachelor's degree in early childhood education or a bachelor's degree
in any field with a State-approved alternate pathway, which may include
coursework, clinical practice, and evidence of knowledge of content and
pedagogy relating to early childhood, and teaching assistants with
appropriate credentials;
(b) High-quality professional development for all staff;
(c) A child-to-instructional staff ratio of no more than 10 to 1;
[[Page 53268]]
(d) A class size of no more than 20 with, at a minimum, one teacher
with high staff qualifications as outlined in paragraph (a) of this
definition;
(e) A full-day program;
(f) Inclusion of children with disabilities to ensure access to and
full participation in all opportunities;
(g) Developmentally appropriate, culturally and linguistically
responsive instruction and evidence-based curricula, and learning
environments that are aligned with the State early learning and
development standards, for at least the year prior to kindergarten
entry;
(h) Individualized accommodations and supports so that all children
can access and participate fully in learning activities;
(i) Instructional staff salaries that are comparable to the
salaries of local K-12 instructional staff;
(j) Program evaluation to ensure continuous improvement;
(k) On-site or accessible comprehensive services for children and
community partnerships that promote families' access to services that
support their children's learning and development; and
(l) Evidence-based health and safety standards.
Increased learning time means using a longer school day, week, or
year schedule to significantly increase the total number of school
hours to include additional time for--
(a) Instruction in one or more core academic subjects, including
English, reading or language arts, mathematics, science, foreign
languages, civics and government, economics, arts, history, and
geography;
(b) Instruction in other subjects and enrichment activities that
contribute to a well-rounded education, including, for example,
physical education, service learning, and experiential and work-based
learning opportunities that are provided by partnering, as appropriate,
with other organizations; and
(c) Teachers to collaborate, plan, and engage in professional
development within and across grades and subjects.\16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ Evidence from the field shows that increasing learning time
in a strategic, high-quality manner is often a key element of
successful school turnaround. See ``The Case for Improving and
Expanding Time in School: A Review of Key Research and Practice,
available at www.timeandlearning.org/files/
CaseforMoreTime1.pdf.'' National Center on Time and
Learning, April 2012.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Persistently lowest-achieving schools means, as determined by the
State--
(a)(1) Any title I school in improvement, corrective action, or
restructuring that--
(A) Is among the lowest-achieving five percent of title I schools
in improvement, corrective action, or restructuring or the lowest-
achieving five title I schools in improvement, corrective action, or
restructuring in the State, whichever number of schools is greater; or
(B) Is a high school that has had a graduation rate as defined in
34 CFR 200.19(b) that is less than 60 percent over a number of years;
and
(2) Any secondary school that is eligible for, but does not
receive, title I funds that--
(A) Is among the lowest-achieving five percent of secondary schools
or the lowest-achieving five secondary schools in the State that are
eligible for, but do not receive, title I funds, whichever number of
schools is greater; or
(B) Is a high school that has had a graduation rate as defined in
34 CFR 200.19(b) that is less than 60 percent over a number of years.
(b) To identify the lowest-achieving schools, a State must take
into account both--
(1) The academic achievement of the ``all students'' group in a
school in terms of proficiency on the State's assessments under section
1111(b)(3) of the ESEA in reading/language arts and mathematics
combined; and
(2) The school's lack of progress on those assessments over a
number of years for the ``all students'' group.
Strategy developer means an entity or individual that--
(a) Maintains proprietary rights for the strategy; or
(b) If no entity or individual maintains proprietary rights for the
strategy--
(1) Has a demonstrated record of success in implementing the
strategy in one or more low-achieving schools; or
(2) Together with the LEA with which the entity or individual has
partnered, has a high-quality plan for implementing the strategy in the
school.
Student growth means the change in student achievement for an
individual student between two or more points in time. For the purpose
of this definition, student achievement means--
(a) For grades and subjects in which assessments are required under
section 1111(b)(3) of the ESEA, a student's score on such assessments
and may include other measures of student learning, such as those
described in paragraph (b) of this definition, provided they are
rigorous and comparable across schools within an LEA.
(b) For grades and subjects in which assessments are not required
under section 1111(b)(3) of the ESEA, alternative measures of student
learning and performance, such as student results on pre-tests, end-of-
course tests, and objective performance-based assessments; student
learning objectives; student performance on English language
proficiency assessments; and other measures of student achievement that
are rigorous and comparable across schools within an LEA.
Whole-school reform strategy means a strategy that is designed to--
(a) Improve student academic achievement or attainment;
(b) Be implemented for all students in a school; and
(c) Address, at a minimum and in a comprehensive and coordinated
manner, each of the following:
(1) School leadership.
(2) Teaching and learning in at least one full academic content
area (including professional learning for educators).
(3) Student non-academic support.
(4) Family and community engagement.
4. Evidence of strongest commitment.
(a) In determining the strength of an LEA's commitment to ensuring
that School Improvement Grants funds are used to provide adequate
resources to enable Tier I, Tier II, priority, and focus schools to
improve student achievement substantially, an SEA must consider, at a
minimum, the extent to which the LEA's application demonstrates that
the LEA has taken, or will take, action to--
(1) In selecting the intervention for each eligible school--
(A) Ensure that the selected intervention is designed to meet the
specific needs of the school, based on a needs analysis that, among
other things, analyzes the needs identified by families and the
community; and
(B) Take into consideration family and community input.
(2) Design and implement interventions consistent with these
requirements;
(3) Use the School Improvement Grants funds to provide adequate
resources and related support to each school it commits to serve in
order to implement fully and effectively the selected intervention on
the first day of the first school year of full implementation;
(4) Recruit, screen, and select external providers, if applicable,
to ensure their quality, and regularly review and hold accountable such
providers for their performance;
(5) Align other resources with the selected intervention;
(6) Modify its practices or policies, if necessary, to enable it to
implement the selected intervention fully and effectively;
[[Page 53269]]
(7) Provide effective oversight and support for implementation of
the selected intervention for each school it proposes to serve, such as
by creating an LEA turnaround office;
(8) Meaningfully engage families and the community in the
implementation of the selected intervention on an ongoing basis;
(9) For an LEA eligible for services under subpart 1 or 2 of part B
of title VI of the ESEA that chooses to modify one element of the
turnaround or transformation model under section I.B.6 of these
requirements, meet the intent and purpose of that element;
(10) For an LEA that applies to implement an evidence-based, whole-
school reform strategy in one or more eligible schools--
(A) Implement a strategy with evidence of effectiveness that
includes a sample population or setting similar to the population or
setting of the school to be served; and
(B) Partner with a strategy developer, as defined in these
requirements;
(11) For an LEA that applies to implement the restart model in one
or more eligible schools, conduct a rigorous review process, as
described in section I.A.2(b), of the charter school operator, CMO, or
EMO that it has selected to operate or manage the school or schools;
and
(12) Sustain the reforms after the funding period ends.
(b) The SEA must consider the LEA's capacity to implement the
interventions and may approve the LEA to serve only those Tier I, Tier
II, priority, and focus schools for which the SEA determines that the
LEA can implement fully and effectively one of the interventions.
B. Providing flexibility.
1. An SEA may award School Improvement Grants funds to an LEA for a
Tier I, Tier II, priority, or focus school that has implemented, in
whole or in part, an intervention that meets the requirements under
section I.A.2(a), 2(b), 2(d), 2(e), 2(f), or 2(g) of these requirements
during the school year in which the LEA applies for School Improvement
Grants funds or during the two school years prior to the school year in
which the LEA applies for School Improvement Grants funds, so that the
LEA and school can continue or complete the intervention being
implemented in that school.
2. An SEA may seek a waiver from the Secretary of the requirements
in section 1116(b) of the ESEA in order to permit a Tier I or Tier II
title I participating school implementing an intervention that meets
the requirements under section I.A.2(a) or 2(b) of these requirements
in an LEA that receives a School Improvement Grant to ``start over'' in
the school improvement timeline. Even though a school implementing the
waiver would no longer be in improvement, corrective action, or
restructuring, it may receive School Improvement Grants funds.
3. An SEA may seek a waiver from the Secretary to enable a Tier I
or Tier II title I participating school that is ineligible to operate a
title I schoolwide program and is operating a title I targeted
assistance program to operate a schoolwide program in order to
implement an intervention that meets the requirements under section
I.A.2(a), 2(b), 2(d), 2(e), 2(f), or 2(g) of these requirements.
4. An SEA may seek a waiver from the Secretary to extend the period
of availability of School Improvement Grants funds so as to make those
funds available to the SEA and its LEAs for up to five years.
5. If an SEA does not seek a waiver under section I.B.2, 3, or 4,
an LEA may seek a waiver.
6. An LEA eligible for services under subpart 1 or 2 of part B of
title VI of the ESEA may modify one element of the turnaround or
transformation model so long as the modification meets the intent and
purpose of the original element, in accordance with section I.A.4(a)(9)
of these requirements.
II. Awarding School Improvement Grants to LEAs
A. LEA requirements.
1. An LEA may apply for a School Improvement Grant if it receives
title I, Part A funds and has one or more schools that qualify under
the State's definition of a Tier I, Tier II, Tier III, priority, or
focus school.
2. In its application, in addition to other information that the
SEA may require, the LEA must--
(a) Identify the schools it commits to serve;
(b) Identify the intervention it will implement in each Tier I,
Tier II, priority, and focus school it commits to serve;
(c) Provide evidence of its strong commitment to use School
Improvement Grants funds to implement the selected intervention by
addressing the factors in section I.A.4(a) of these requirements;
(d) Include a timeline delineating the steps the LEA will take to
implement the selected intervention in each school identified in the
LEA's application; and
(e) Include a budget indicating how it will allocate School
Improvement Grants funds among the schools it commits to serve that is
of sufficient size and scope and that:
(1) For each Tier I, Tier II, priority, and focus school the LEA
commits to serve, ensures that the LEA can implement one of the
interventions identified in sections I.A.2(a)-(b) or sections I.A.2(d)-
(g) of these requirements for a minimum of three years and no more than
five years; and
(2) For each Tier III school the LEA commits to serve, includes the
services it will provide the school, particularly if the school meets
additional criteria established by the SEA, for a minimum of three
years and no more than five years.
3. An LEA that intends to use the first year of its School
Improvement Grants award for planning and other pre-implementation
activities for an eligible school must include in its application to
the SEA a description of the activities, the timeline for implementing
those activities, and a description of how those activities will lead
to successful implementation of the selected intervention.
4. The LEA must serve:
(a) In an SEA with an approved ESEA flexibility request, each
priority school unless the LEA demonstrates that it lacks sufficient
capacity to undertake one of the interventions described in section
I.A.2 of these requirements in each priority school, in which case the
LEA must indicate the priority schools that it can effectively serve.
An LEA may not serve with School Improvement Grants funds awarded under
section 1003(g) of the ESEA a priority or focus school in which it does
not implement one of the interventions identified in section I.A.2 of
these requirements.
(b) In all other SEAs, each Tier I school unless the LEA
demonstrates that it lacks sufficient capacity (which may be due, in
part, to serving Tier II schools) to undertake one of the interventions
described in section I.A.2 of these requirements in each Tier I school,
in which case the LEA must indicate the Tier I schools that it can
effectively serve. An LEA may not serve with School Improvement Grants
funds awarded under section 1003(g) of the ESEA a Tier I or Tier II
school in which it does not implement one of the interventions
identified in section I.A.2 of these requirements.
5. An LEA that commits to serve schools that do not receive title
I, Part A funds must ensure that each such school it serves receives
all of the State and local funds it would have received in the absence
of the School Improvement Grants funds.
6. An LEA in which one or more Tier I schools are located and that
does not apply to serve at least one of these
[[Page 53270]]
schools may not apply for a grant to serve only Tier III schools.
7. An LEA in which one or more priority schools are located and
that does not apply to serve all of these schools may not apply for a
grant to serve one or more focus schools.
8. (a) To monitor each Tier I, Tier II, priority, and focus school
that receives School Improvement Grants funds, an LEA must--
(1) Establish annual goals for student achievement on the State's
assessments in both reading/language arts and mathematics; and
(2) Measure progress on the leading indicators in section III of
these requirements.
(b) The LEA must also meet the requirements with respect to
adequate yearly progress in section 1111(b)(2) of the ESEA, if
applicable.
9. An LEA must hold the charter school operator, CMO, EMO, or other
external provider accountable for meeting these requirements, if
applicable.
B. SEA requirements.
1. (a) To receive a School Improvement Grant, an SEA must submit an
application to the Department at such time, and containing such
information, as the Secretary shall reasonably require.
(b) In its application to the Department, each SEA may submit one
State-determined intervention model for the Secretary's review and
approval. To be approved, a State-determined intervention model must:
(1) Ensure strong leadership by:
(A) Requiring a review of the performance of the current principal;
(B) Requiring replacement of the principal, if such a change is
necessary to ensure strong and effective leadership, or requiring the
LEA to demonstrate to the SEA that the current principal has a track
record in improving achievement and has the ability to lead the
turnaround effort; and
(C) Requiring the LEA to provide the principal with operational
flexibility in the areas of scheduling, staff, curriculum, and budget;
(2) Ensure that teachers are effective and able to improve
instruction by:
(A) Requiring a review of all staff and retaining only those who
are determined to be effective and to have the ability to be successful
in supporting the turnaround effort;
(B) Preventing ineffective teachers from transferring to a school
implementing an intervention under section I.A.2; and
(C) Providing job-embedded, ongoing professional development
informed by the teacher evaluation and support systems and tied to
teacher and student needs;
(3) Establish schedules and implement strategies that provide
increased learning time (as defined in these requirements);
(4) Strengthen the school's instructional program by ensuring that
it--
(A) Is research-based, rigorous, and aligned with State academic
content standards; and
(B) Meets student needs;
(5) Use data to inform instruction and for continuous improvement,
including by providing time for collaboration on the use of data;
(6) Establish a school environment that improves school safety and
discipline and addresses other non-academic factors that impact student
achievement, such as students' social, emotional, and health needs; and
(7) Provide ongoing mechanisms for family and community engagement.
Note: An intervention that the Secretary approved as part of an
SEA's ESEA flexibility request that also includes increased learning
time, as defined in these requirements, will be considered to have
met the criteria in II.B.1(b).
2. (a) An SEA must review and approve, consistent with these
requirements, an application for a School Improvement Grant that it
receives from an LEA.
(b) Before approving an LEA's application, the SEA must ensure that
the application meets these requirements, particularly with respect
to--
(1) Whether the LEA has agreed to implement one of the
interventions identified in section I.A.2 of these requirements in each
Tier I and Tier II school or, for an SEA with an approved ESEA
flexibility request, each priority and focus school included in its
application;
(2) The extent to which the LEA's application demonstrates the
LEA's strong commitment to use School Improvement Grants funds to
implement the selected intervention by addressing the factors in
section I.A.4 of these requirements;
(3) Whether the LEA has the capacity to implement the selected
intervention fully and effectively in each school identified in its
application; and
(4) Whether the LEA has submitted a budget that includes sufficient
funds to implement the selected intervention fully and effectively in
each school it identifies in its application.
3. An SEA may, consistent with State law, take over an LEA or
specific Tier I, Tier II, priority, or focus schools in order to
implement the interventions in these requirements.
4. An SEA may not require an LEA to implement a particular
intervention in one or more schools unless the SEA has taken over the
LEA or school.
5. To the extent that a school implementing a restart model becomes
a charter school LEA, an SEA must hold the charter school LEA
accountable, or ensure that the charter school authorizer holds it
accountable, for complying with these requirements.
6. An SEA must post on its Web site, within 30 days of awarding
School Improvement Grants to LEAs and within 30 days of approving any
amendments to LEA applications, all approved LEA applications
(including applications to serve Tier I, Tier II, Tier III, priority,
and focus schools and approved amendments) as well as a summary of
those grants that includes the following information:
(a) Name and National Center for Education Statistics (NCES)
identification number of each LEA awarded a grant.
(b) Amount of each LEA's grant.
(c) Name and NCES identification number of each school to be
served.
(d) Type of intervention to be implemented in each Tier I, Tier II,
priority, and focus school.
7. If an SEA does not have sufficient School Improvement Grants
funds to award, for at least three years, a grant to each LEA that
submits an approvable application, the SEA must give priority to LEAs
to serve Tier I or Tier II schools or, for an SEA with an approved ESEA
flexibility request, the SEA must give priority to LEAs to serve
priority schools.
8. An SEA must award a School Improvement Grant to an LEA in an
amount that is of sufficient size and scope to support the activities
required under section 1116 of the ESEA and these requirements. The
LEA's total grant may not be less than $50,000 for each school it
commits to serve and, for each school in which the LEA commits to fully
implement an intervention that meets the requirements under section
I.A.2(a), 2(b), 2(d), 2(e), 2(f), or 2(g) of these requirements, may be
up to $2,000,000 per year.
9. If an SEA does not have sufficient School Improvement Grants
funds to allocate to each LEA with a Tier I or Tier II school or, in an
SEA with an approved ESEA flexibility request, to each LEA with a
priority or focus school, an amount sufficient to enable the school to
implement fully and effectively the specified intervention throughout
the period of availability, including any extension afforded
[[Page 53271]]
through a waiver, the SEA may take into account the distribution of
Tier I, Tier II, priority, and focus schools among such LEAs in the
State to ensure that Tier I and Tier II schools or, in an SEA with an
approved ESEA flexibility request, priority and focus schools
throughout the State can be served.
10. In identifying Tier I, Tier II, priority, and focus schools in
a State for purposes of allocating funds appropriated for School
Improvement Grants under section 1003(g) of the ESEA, an SEA must
exclude from consideration any school that was previously identified as
a Tier I, Tier II, priority, or focus school and in which an LEA is
implementing one of the interventions identified in these requirements
using funds made available under section 1003(g) of the ESEA.
11. Before submitting its application for a School Improvement
Grant to the Department, the SEA must consult with its Committee of
Practitioners established under section 1903(b) of the ESEA regarding
the rules and policies contained therein and may consult with other
stakeholders that have an interest in its application.
C. Renewal for additional one-year periods.
1. An SEA must renew the School Improvement Grant for each affected
LEA for additional one-year periods, subject to sections II.C.4-C.6 of
these requirements, if the LEA demonstrates that its Tier I, Tier II,
priority, and focus schools are meeting the annual goals for student
achievement established by the LEA consistent with section II.A.8 of
these requirements, and that its Tier III schools are meeting the goals
established by the LEA and approved by the SEA.
2. An SEA may renew an LEA's School Improvement Grant with respect
to a particular school, subject to the requirements in sections II.C.4-
C.6, if the SEA determines that, with respect to that school--
(a) The school is making progress toward meeting the annual goals
for student achievement established by the LEA consistent with section
II.A.8 of these requirements;
(b) The school is making progress on the leading indicators in
section III of these requirements;
(c) The LEA is implementing interventions in the school with
fidelity to applicable requirements and to the LEA's application; or
(d) The LEA's Tier III school is making progress toward the goals
established by the LEA.
3. If an SEA does not renew an LEA's School Improvement Grant with
respect to a particular school, the SEA may reallocate those funds to
other eligible LEAs, consistent with these requirements.
4. An SEA, prior to renewing the School Improvement Grant of an LEA
that received funds for a full year of planning and other pre-
implementation activities for a particular school, must review the
performance of the LEA in that school during the planning year against
the LEA's approved application and determine that the LEA will be able
to fully implement its chosen intervention for the school on the first
day of the following school year.
5. An SEA may renew an LEA's School Improvement Grant for a
particular school, after three years of continuous intervention
implementation in that school, after the SEA has determined that such
renewal is appropriate pursuant to the criteria in sections II.C.1-C.2
of these requirements, for up to an additional two years for continued
full implementation of the intervention or for activities related to
sustaining reforms in the school. An SEA may not renew an LEA's School
Improvement Grant if doing so would result in more than five years of
continuous School Improvement Grants funding with respect to a
particular school.
6. Nothing in these requirements diminishes an SEA's authority to
take appropriate enforcement action with respect to an LEA that is not
complying with the terms of its grant.
D. State reservation for administration, evaluation, and technical
assistance.
An SEA may reserve from the School Improvement Grants funds it
receives under section 1003(g) of the ESEA in any given year no more
than five percent for administration, evaluation, and technical
assistance expenses. An SEA must describe in its application for a
School Improvement Grant how the SEA will use these funds.
III. Reporting and Evaluation
A. Reporting metrics.
To inform and evaluate the effectiveness of the interventions
identified in these requirements, the Secretary will collect data on
the metrics in the following chart. Accordingly, an SEA must report
only the following new data with respect to School Improvement Grants:
1. A list of the LEAs, including their NCES identification numbers,
that received a School Improvement Grant under section 1003(g) of the
ESEA and the amount of the grant.
2. For each LEA that received a School Improvement Grant, a list of
the schools that were served, their NCES identification numbers, and
the amount of funds or value of services each school received.
3. For any Tier I, Tier II, priority, or focus school, school-level
data on the metrics designated on the following chart as ``SIG''
(School Improvement Grants):
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Achievement Leading
Metric Source indicators indicators
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SCHOOL DATA
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Which intervention the school used SIG............................. ................. .................
(e.g., turnaround, restart, evidence-
based, whole school reform strategy).
Number of schools in rural LEAs SIG............................. ................. .................
implementing an intervention model with
a modified element pursuant to section
I.B.6 of these requirements.
Which intervention the school in a rural SIG............................. ................. .................
LEA implementing an intervention model
with a modified element pursuant to
section I.B.6 of these requirements
used.
AYP status.............................. EDFacts......................... [check] .................
Which AYP targets the school met and EDFacts......................... [check] .................
missed.
School improvement status............... EDFacts......................... [check] .................
Number of minutes within the school year SIG............................. ................. [check]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
STUDENT OUTCOME/ACADEMIC PROGRESS DATA
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 53272]]
Percentage of students at or above each EDFacts......................... [check] .................
proficiency level on State assessments
in reading/language arts and
mathematics (e.g., Basic, Proficient,
Advanced), by grade and by student
subgroup.
Student participation rate on State EDFacts......................... ................. [check]
assessments in reading/language arts
and in mathematics, by student subgroup.
Average scale scores on State SIG............................. [check] .................
assessments in reading/language arts
and in mathematics, by grade, for the
``all students'' group, for each
achievement quartile, and for each
subgroup.
Percentage of limited English proficient SIG............................. [check] .................
students who attain English language
proficiency.
Graduation rate......................... EDFacts......................... [check] .................
Dropout rate............................ EDFacts......................... ................. [check]
Student attendance rate................. SIG............................. ................. [check]
Number and percentage of students SIG HS only..................... ................. [check]
completing advanced coursework (e.g.,
AP/IB), early-college high schools, or
dual enrollment classes.
College enrollment rates................ EDFacts......................... [check] .................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
STUDENT CONNECTION AND SCHOOL CLIMATE
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Discipline incidents.................... EDFacts......................... ................. [check]
Chronic absenteeism rates............... CRDC............................ ................. [check]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TALENT
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Distribution of teachers by performance SIG............................. ................. [check]
level on LEA's teacher evaluation
system.
Teacher attendance rate................. SIG............................. ................. [check]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. An SEA must report these metrics for the school year prior to
implementing the intervention, if the data exist, to serve as a
baseline, and for each year thereafter for which the SEA allocates
School Improvement Grants funds under section 1003(g) of the ESEA. With
respect to a school that is closed, the SEA need report only the
identity of the school and the intervention taken--i.e., school
closure.
B. Evaluation.
An LEA that receives a School Improvement Grant must participate in
any evaluation of that grant conducted by the Secretary.
Final Requirements
We will announce the final requirements in a document in the
Federal Register. We will determine the final requirements after
considering responses to this document and other information available
to the Department. This document does not preclude us from proposing
additional requirements subject to meeting applicable rulemaking
requirements.
Note: This document does not solicit applications. In any year
in which we choose to use one or more of these priorities,
requirements, definitions, and selection criteria, we invite
applications through a document in the Federal Register.
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
Regulatory Impact Analysis
Under Executive Order 12866, the Secretary must determine whether
this regulatory action is ``significant'' and, therefore, subject to
the requirements of the Executive order and subject to review by the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Section 3(f) of Executive Order
12866 defines a ``significant regulatory action'' as an action likely
to result in a rule that may--
(1) Have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more,
or adversely affect a sector of the economy, productivity, competition,
jobs, the environment, public health or safety, or State, local, or
tribal governments or communities in a material way (also referred to
as an ``economically significant'' rule);
(2) Create serious inconsistency or otherwise interfere with an
action taken or planned by another agency;
(3) Materially alter the budgetary impacts of entitlement grants,
user fees, or loan programs or the rights and obligations of recipients
thereof; or
(4) Raise novel legal or policy issues arising out of legal
mandates, the President's priorities, or the principles stated in the
Executive order.
This proposed regulatory action would have an annual effect on the
economy of more than $100 million because fiscal year 2014
appropriations for the program, which the Department will award to SEAs
in fiscal year 2015, are approximately $506 million. Therefore, this
proposed action is ``economically significant'' and subject to review
by OMB under section 3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866. Notwithstanding
this determination, we have assessed the potential costs and benefits,
both quantitative and qualitative, of this proposed regulatory action
and have determined that the benefits would justify the costs.
We have also reviewed this proposed regulatory action under
Executive Order 13563, which supplements and explicitly reaffirms the
principles, structures, and definitions governing regulatory review
established in Executive Order 12866. To the extent permitted by law,
Executive Order 13563 requires that an agency--
(1) Propose or adopt regulations only upon a reasoned determination
that their benefits justify their costs (recognizing that some benefits
and costs are difficult to quantify);
(2) Tailor its regulations to impose the least burden on society,
consistent with obtaining regulatory objectives and taking into
account--among other things and to the extent practicable--the costs of
cumulative regulations;
(3) In choosing among alternative regulatory approaches, select
those approaches that maximize net benefits (including potential
economic, environmental, public health and safety, and other
advantages; distributive impacts; and equity);
(4) To the extent feasible, specify performance objectives, rather
than the behavior or manner of compliance a regulated entity must
adopt; and
(5) Identify and assess available alternatives to direct
regulation, including economic incentives--such as user fees or
marketable permits--to encourage the desired behavior, or
[[Page 53273]]
provide information that enables the public to make choices.
Executive Order 13563 also requires an agency ``to use the best
available techniques to quantify anticipated present and future
benefits and costs as accurately as possible.'' The Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs of OMB has emphasized that these
techniques may include ``identifying changing future compliance costs
that might result from technological innovation or anticipated
behavioral changes.''
We are issuing these proposed requirements only on a reasoned
determination that their benefits would justify their costs. In
choosing among alternative regulatory approaches, we selected those
approaches that would maximize net benefits. Based on the analysis that
follows, the Department believes that this regulatory action is
consistent with the principles in Executive Order 13563.
We also have determined that this proposed regulatory action would
not unduly interfere with State, local, and tribal governments in the
exercise of their governmental functions.
In accordance with both Executive orders, the Department has
assessed the potential costs and benefits, both quantitative and
qualitative, of this regulatory action. The potential costs associated
with this regulatory action are those resulting from statutory
requirements and those we have determined as necessary for
administering the Department's programs and activities.
In this regulatory impact analysis we discuss the potential costs
and benefits and the regulatory alternatives we considered.
Discussion of Potential Costs and Benefits
The Department believes that the proposed requirements would not
impose significant costs on SEAs and LEAs that receive SIG funds. State
and local costs of implementing the proposed requirements (including
State costs of applying for grants, distributing grant funds to LEAs,
ensuring compliance with the proposed requirements, and reporting to
the Department; and LEA costs of applying for subgrants and
implementing interventions) will be financed through grant funds. We do
not believe that the proposed requirements will impose burden that SEAs
or LEAs will need to meet from other sources.
This regulatory action would continue to drive SIG funds to LEAs
that have the lowest-achieving schools in amounts sufficient to turn
those schools around and significantly increase student achievement. It
would also continue to require participating LEAs to adopt the most
effective approaches to turning around low-achieving schools. In short,
we believe that this action would ensure that limited SIG funds
continue to be put to their optimum use--that is, that they are
targeted to where they are most needed and used in the most effective
manner possible. The benefits, then, would be more effective schools
serving children from low-income families and a better education for
those children.
Regulatory Alternatives Considered
As discussed elsewhere, the Department believes that the proposed
requirements are needed to ensure that the SIG program is implemented
in a manner that, among other things, is consistent with the
programmatic changes made by Congress in the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2014. One alternative to promulgation of the
proposed requirements would be for the Department to allocate fiscal
year 2014 SIG funds without establishing any new requirements governing
their use. Under such an alternative, States and LEAs would need to
implement the new provisions in the appropriations language without key
regulatory support from the Department. For instance, each State would
be responsible for ensuring, for its LEAs that seek to use SIG funds to
implement an evidence-based, whole-school reform strategy in an
eligible school, that the strategy selected by the LEA constitutes
whole-school reform and is supported by at least moderate evidence of
effectiveness. We do not believe that States generally possess the
capacity or expertise needed to meet this responsibility with the
amount of rigor expected by Congress.
Elsewhere in this section under Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, we
identify and explain burdens specifically associated with information
collection requirements.
Accounting Statement
As required by OMB Circular A-4 (available at www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/omb/circulars/a004/a-4.pdf), in the
following table we have prepared an accounting statement showing the
classification of the expenditures associated with the provisions of
this regulatory action. This table provides our best estimate of the
changes in annual monetized transfers as a result of this regulatory
action. Expenditures are classified as transfers from the Federal
Government to SEAs.
Accounting Statement Classification of Estimated Expenditures
[in millions]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category Transfers
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annualized Monetized Transfers............ $506
From Whom To Whom? From the Federal Government
to SEAs.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Clarity of the Regulations
Executive Order 12866 and the Presidential memorandum ``Plain
Language in Government Writing'' require each agency to write
regulations that are easy to understand.
The Department invites comments on how to make these proposed
regulations easier to understand, including answers to questions such
as the following:
Are the requirements in the proposed regulations clearly
stated?
Do the proposed regulations contain technical terms or
other wording that interferes with their clarity?
Does the format of the proposed regulations (grouping and
order of sections, use of headings, paragraphing, etc.) aid or reduce
their clarity?
Would the proposed regulations be easier to understand if
we divided them into more (but shorter) sections?
Could the description of the proposed regulations in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of this preamble be more helpful in
making the proposed regulations easier to understand? If so, how?
What else could we do to make the proposed regulations
easier to understand?
To send any comments that concern how the Department could make
these proposed regulations easier to understand, see the instructions
in the ADDRESSES section.
Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification
The Secretary certifies that these proposed requirements will not
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. Under the U.S. Small Business Administration's Size
Standards, small entities include small governmental jurisdictions such
as cities, towns, or school districts (LEAs) with a population of less
than 50,000. Although the majority of LEAs that receive title I funds
qualify as small entities under this definition, the requirements
proposed in this document would not have a significant economic impact
on these small LEAs because (1) The costs of implementing
[[Page 53274]]
the required interventions would be covered by the grants received by
successful applicants, and (2) in most cases the costs of developing
and submitting applications would not be significantly higher than the
costs that would be incurred in applying for program funds under the
statutory requirements. Also, small LEAs may receive technical
assistance and other support from their SEAs in developing applications
for these funds.
The Department believes the benefits provided under this proposed
regulatory action outweigh the burdens on these small LEAs of complying
with the proposed requirements. In particular, the proposed
requirements would make significant resources available to eligible
small LEAs to make the fundamental changes needed to turn around their
lowest-achieving schools, resources that otherwise may not be available
to small and often geographically isolated LEAs.
The Secretary invites comments from small LEAs as to whether they
believe the requirements proposed in this document would have a
significant economic impact on them and, if so, requests evidence to
support that belief.
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
As part of its continuing effort to reduce paperwork and respondent
burden, the Department provides the general public and Federal agencies
with an opportunity to comment on proposed and continuing collections
of information in accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A)). This helps ensure that: the public
understands the Department's collection instructions, respondents can
provide the requested data in the desired format, reporting burden
(time and financial resources) is minimized, collection instruments are
clearly understood, and the Department can properly assess the impact
of collection requirements on respondents.
A Federal agency may not conduct or sponsor a collection of
information unless OMB approves the collection under the PRA and the
corresponding information collection instrument displays a currently
valid OMB control number. Notwithstanding any other provision of law,
no person is required to comply with, or is subject to penalty for
failure to comply with, a collection of information if the collection
instrument does not display a currently valid OMB control number.
In the final requirements we will display the control number 1810-
0682 assigned by OMB to any information collection requirements
proposed in these proposed requirements and adopted in the final
requirements. These requirements contain information collection
activities covered under the PRA and currently approved by OMB. The
activities that are currently approved by OMB consist of: (1) The SEAs'
preparation of applications to submit to the Department to apply for
SIG funds and the SEAs' posting of the LEAs' applications on the SEAs'
Web sites; (2) the reporting of specific school-level data on the use
of SIG funds and specific interventions implemented in LEAs receiving
SIG funds that the Department currently collects through EDFacts (OMB
Control 1875-0240); and (3) the application an LEA must submit to apply
to its SEA for SIG funds. The following is a summary of how the
proposed requirements would change these activities and the effect they
would have on the total burden.
Changes to the SEA Applications
Under proposed requirement section II.B.1(b), each SEA may submit,
as part of the required application it submits to the Department to
receive SIG funds, one State-determined intervention model for review
and approval by the Secretary. These proposed requirements would
require an SEA to submit a proposed State-determined intervention model
as part of its application, if a State choses to implement this model.
Under the burden estimates currently approved by OMB, 52 SEAs will
complete, review, and post SEA and LEA applications for a total of
46,800 annual burden hours at a cost of $30 per hour, totaling an
annual cost of $1,404,000. These proposed requirements do not change
the currently approved annual burden for SEAs.
Revising Reporting Requirements
The proposed requirements make a number of clarifications to the
reporting requirements. First, proposed requirement section III.A.3
eliminates the metric for ``Truants'' and replaces it with ``Chronic
absenteeism rates.'' Second, proposed requirement III.A clarifies the
correct source for each of the required metrics and removes references
to the SFSF previously approved under OMB data collection 1810-0695.
Finally, proposed requirements in section III.A.3 would require an SEA
to report, with respect to schools receiving SIG awards, the number of
schools implementing models with a modified element pursuant to
proposed section I.B.6 and which models are being implemented in those
schools.
Under the reporting burden estimates, 52 SEAs will report SEA and
LEA requirements for a total of 3,640 annual burden hours at a cost of
$30 per hour totaling an annual cost of $109,200. These proposed
requirements add burden to the currently approved annual burden for
SEAs.
Changes to the LEA Application
The proposed requirements also add to the existing requirements in
section I.A.4(a) (Evidence of strongest commitment) information that,
under proposed section II.A.2(c), the LEA must include in the LEA
application related to an evidence-based, whole-school reform strategy
(for those LEAs that propose to implement such a strategy); meaningful
family and community engagement; LEA oversight and support of SIG
implementation; review of, and accountability for, external provider
performance; and the review process for selecting a charter school
operator, CMO, or EMO.
Under the burden estimates that are currently approved by OMB,
3,050 LEAs will complete an application for a total of 183,000 annual
burden hours at a cost of $25 per hour totaling an annual cost of
$4,575,000. These proposed requirements do not change the approved
annual burden for LEAs.
[[Page 53275]]
Collection of Information
State Educational Agency Estimate
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SIG Activity Number of SEAs Hours/activity Hours Cost/hour Cost
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Complete SEA application 52 100 5,200 $30 $156,000
(including requests for
waivers)....................
Review and post LEA 52 800 41,600 30 1,248,000
applications................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reporting.................... 52 70 3,640 30 109,200
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total.................... .............. .............. 50,440 30 1,513,200
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Local Educational Agency Estimate
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SIG Activity Number of LEAs Hours/activity Hours Cost/hour Cost
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Complete LEA application........ 3,050 60 183,000 $25 $4,575,000
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total........................... .............. .............. 183,000 25 4,575,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To comment on the information collection requirements, please send
your comments to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, OMB,
Attention: Desk Officer for U.S. Department of Education. Send these
comments by email to OIRADOCKET@omb.eop.gov or by fax to (202)
395-6974. You may also send a copy of these comments to the Department
via the Federal eRulemaking Portal listed in the ADDRESSES section.
We have prepared an Information Collection Request (ICR) for these
collections. In preparing your comments you may want to comment on the
ICR, which is available at www.reginfo.gov. Click on Information
Collection Review. This ICR is identified as 1810-0682.
We consider your comments on this collection of information in--
Deciding whether the collections are necessary for the
proper performance of our functions, including whether the information
will have practical use;
Evaluating the accuracy of our estimate of the burden of
the collections, including the validity of our methodology and
assumptions;
Enhancing the quality, usefulness, and clarity of the
information we collect; and
Minimizing the burden on those who must respond. This
includes exploring the use of appropriate automated, electronic,
mechanical, or other technological collection techniques.
ADDRESSES: Comments submitted in response to this document should be
submitted electronically through the Federal eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov by selecting Docket ID ED-2014-OESE-0179 or via
postal mail, commercial delivery, or hand delivery. Please note that
comments submitted by fax or email and those submitted after the
comment period will not be accepted. Written requests for information
or comments submitted by postal mail or delivery should be addressed to
the Director of the Information Collection Clearance Division, U.S.
Department of Education, 400 Maryland Avenue SW., Mailstop L-OM-2-
2E319LBJ, Room 2E115, Washington, DC 20202-4537.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Electronically mail
ICDocketMgr@ed.gov. Please do not send comments here.
Intergovernmental Review
This program is not subject to Executive Order 12372 and the
regulations in 34 CFR part 79.
Accessible Format: Individuals with disabilities can obtain this
document in an accessible format (e.g., braille, large print,
audiotape, or compact disc) on request to the person listed under FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
Electronic Access to This Document: 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 via the Federal Digital System
at: www.gpo.gov/fdsys. At this site 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). To use PDF
you must have Adobe Acrobat Reader, which is available free at the
site.
You may also access documents of the Department published in the
Federal Register by using the article search feature at:
www.federalregister.gov. Specifically, through the advanced search
feature at this site, you can limit your search to documents published
by the Department.
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Number 84.377A)
Dated: September 2, 2014.
Deborah Delisle,
Assistant Secretary for Elementary and Secondary Education.
[FR Doc. 2014-21185 Filed 9-5-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000-01-P