Proposed Priorities, Requirements, Selection Criterion, and Definitions-First in the World Program, 9414-9423 [2015-03502]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 35 / Monday, February 23, 2015 / Proposed Rules
specified in paragraphs (h)(1) and (h)(2) of
this AD, using methods approved in
accordance with the procedures specified in
paragraph (i) of this AD.
(1) Within 6 months after the effective date
of this AD, record the existing fault codes
stored in the FQIS processor and then do a
BITE check (check of built-in test equipment)
of the FQIS, in accordance with the
Accomplishment Instructions of Boeing
Service Bulletin 757–28–0136, dated June 5,
2014. If any fault codes are recorded prior to
the BITE check or as a result of the BITE
check, before further flight, do all applicable
repairs and repeat the BITE check until a
successful test is performed with no faults
found, in accordance with Boeing Service
Bulletin 757–28–0136, dated June 5, 2014.
Repeat these actions thereafter at intervals
not to exceed 750 flight hours.
(2) Within 72 months after the effective
date of this AD, modify the airplane by
separating FQIS wiring that runs between the
FQIS processor and the center fuel tank,
including any circuits that might pass
through a main fuel tank, from other airplane
wiring that is not intrinsically safe.
(i) Alternative Methods of Compliance
(AMOCs)
(1) The Manager, Seattle Aircraft
Certification Office (ACO), FAA, has the
authority to approve AMOCs for this AD, if
requested using the procedures found in 14
CFR 39.19. In accordance with 14 CFR 39.19,
send your request to your principal inspector
or local Flight Standards District Office, as
appropriate. If sending information directly
to the manager of the ACO, send it to the
attention of the person identified in
paragraph (j) of this AD. Information may be
emailed to: 9-ANM-Seattle-ACO-AMOCRequests@faa.gov.
(2) Before using any approved AMOC,
notify your appropriate principal inspector,
or lacking a principal inspector, the manager
of the local flight standards district office/
certificate holding district office.
(j) Related Information
For more information about this AD,
contact Jon Regimbal, Aerospace Engineer,
Propulsion Branch, ANM–140S, FAA, Seattle
Aircraft Certification Office (ACO), 1601 Lind
Avenue SW., Renton, Washington 98057–
3356; phone: 425–917–6506; fax: 425–917–
6590; email: jon.regimbal@faa.gov.
Issued in Renton, Washington, on
December 18, 2014.
Jeffrey E. Duven,
Manager, Transport Airplane Directorate,
Aircraft Certification Service.
[FR Doc. 2015–03540 Filed 2–20–15; 8:45 am]
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BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
34 CFR Chapter VI
Proposed Priorities, Requirements,
Selection Criterion, and Definitions—
First in the World Program
CFDA Numbers: 84.116F and 84.116X
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Office of Postsecondary
Education, Department of Education.
ACTION: Proposed priorities,
requirements, selection criterion, and
definitions.
AGENCY:
The Assistant Secretary for
Postsecondary Education proposes
priorities, requirements, a selection
criterion, and definitions under the First
in the World (FITW) Program. The
Assistant Secretary may use these
priorities, requirements, selection
criterion, and definitions for FITW
competitions in fiscal year (FY) 2015
and later years. These priorities,
requirements, selection criterion, and
definitions would enable the
Department to focus the FITW program
on identified barriers to student success
in postsecondary education and
advance the program’s purpose to build
evidence for what works in
postsecondary education through
development, evaluation, and
dissemination of innovative strategies to
support students who are at risk of
failure in persisting in and completing
their postsecondary programs of study.
DATES: We must receive your comments
on or before March 25, 2015.
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.
• 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 Frank
Frankfort, U.S. Department of
Education, 1990 K Street NW., Room
6166, Washington, DC 20006.
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:
Frank Frankfort. Telephone: (202) 502–
7513 or email: frank.frankfort@ed.gov.
SUMMARY:
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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:
Invitation to Comment: We invite you
to submit comments regarding this
notice. To ensure that your comments
have maximum effect in developing the
notice of final priorities, requirements,
selection criterion, and definitions, we
urge you to identify clearly the specific
proposed priority, requirement,
selection criterion or definition 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
priorities, requirements, selection
criterion, or definitions. Please let us
know of any further ways we could
reduce potential costs or increase
potential benefits while preserving the
effective and efficient administration of
the program.
During and after the comment period,
you may inspect all public comments
about this notice by accessing
Regulations.gov. You may also inspect
the comments in person in room 6164,
1990 K. St. NW., Washington, DC
between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:00
p.m., Washington, DC time, Monday
through Friday of each week except
Federal holidays. 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 notice. If you want to
schedule an appointment for this type of
accommodation or auxiliary aid, please
contact the person listed under FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
Purpose of Program: Earning a
postsecondary degree or credential is a
prerequisite for the growing jobs of the
new economy and the clearest pathway
to the middle class. Average earnings of
college graduates are almost twice as
high as that of workers with only a high
school diploma and, over this decade,
employment in jobs requiring education
beyond a high school diploma will grow
more rapidly than employment in jobs
that do not.1
1 Carnavale, A., Smith, N., Strohl, J., Help
Wanted: Projections of Jobs and Education
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But today, even though college
enrollment has increased by 50 percent
since 1990, from almost 14 million
students to almost 21 million students,
and despite the importance of a
postsecondary education to financial
security for American families and for
the national economy to grow and
remain competitive in the global
economy, only 40 percent of Americans
hold a postsecondary degree.2 While the
vast majority of high school graduates
from the wealthiest American families
continue on to higher education, only
half of high school graduates from the
poorest families attend college.3 About
60 percent of students at four-year
institutions earn a bachelor’s degree
within six years.4 For low-income
students, the prospects are even worse
as only 40 percent reach completion.5
Almost 37 million Americans report
‘‘some college, no degree’’ as their
highest level of education.6 Due to these
outcomes, the U.S. has been outpaced
internationally in higher education. In
1990, the U.S. ranked first in the world
in four-year degree attainment among
25–34 year olds; in 2012, the U.S.
ranked 12th.7
Recognizing these factors, President
Obama set a goal for the country that
America will once again have the
highest proportion of college graduates
in the world. To support this national
effort, the Administration has outlined a
comprehensive agenda that includes
expanding opportunity and increasing
quality at all levels of education, from
early learning through higher education.
The FITW program is a key part of this
agenda.
Unlike in previous generations, adult
learners, working students, part-time
students, students from low-income
Requirements Through 2018. Georgetown Center on
Education and the Workforce, 2010.
2 National Center for Education Statistics. ‘‘Total
fall enrollment in degree-granting postsecondary
institutions, by attendance status, sex of student,
and control of institution: Selected years, 1947
through 2012.’’ Retrieved from: https://nces.ed.gov/
programs/digest/d13/tables/dt13_303.10.asp.
3 National Center for Education Statistics.
‘‘Percentage of recent high school completers
enrolled in 2-year and 4-year colleges, by income
level: 1975 through 2012.’’ Retrieved from: https://
nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d13/tables/dt13_
302.30.asp.
4 National Center for Education Statistics.
‘‘Percentage distribution of first-time postsecondary
students starting at 2- and 4-year institutions during
the 2003–04 academic year, by highest degree
attained, enrollment status, and selected
characteristics: Spring 2009.’’ Retrieved from:
https://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d13/tables/
dt13_326.40.asp.
5 Id.
6 U.S. Census Bureau, 2012 American Community
Survey.
7 Organization of Economic Co-operation and
Development, Education at a Glance 2014.
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backgrounds, students of color, and
first-generation students now make up
the majority of students in college.8
Ensuring that these students persist in
and complete their postsecondary
education is essential to meeting our
nation’s educational challenges.
However, the traditional methods and
practices of the country’s higher
education system have typically not
been focused on ensuring successful
outcomes for these students, and too
little is known about what strategies are
most effective for addressing key
barriers that prevent these students from
persisting and completing.
The FITW program addresses these
problems by supporting the
development of innovative solutions to
persistent and widespread challenges in
postsecondary education, particularly
those that affect adult learners, working
students, part-time students, students
from low-income backgrounds, students
of color, and first-generation students,
and building evidence for what works in
postsecondary education by testing the
effectiveness of these strategies in
improving student persistence and
completion outcomes. Similar to the
Department’s Investing in Innovation
Fund, which supports innovation and
evidence building in elementary and
secondary education, a key element of
the FITW program is its multi-tier
structure that links the amount of
funding that an applicant may receive to
the quality of evidence supporting the
efficacy of the proposed project.
Applicants proposing practices
supported by limited evidence can
receive relatively small grants
(Development grants) that support the
development and initial evaluation of
innovative but untested strategies.
Applicants proposing practices
supported by evidence from rigorous
evaluations can receive larger grants
(Validation and Scale-up grants), in
amounts commensurate to the level of
supporting evidence, for
implementation at greater scale to test
whether initially successful strategies
remain effective when adopted in varied
locations and with large and diverse
groups of students. This structure
provides incentives for applicants to
build evidence of effectiveness of their
proposed projects and to address the
barriers to serving large numbers of
students within institutions and across
systems, States, regions, or the country.
Additionally, the Department is
exploring ways to accelerate the
progress of building evidence for
8 U.S. Department of Education. 2010. Profile of
Undergraduate Students: 2007–08. National Center
for Education Statistics: 2010–205. Washington DC.
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effective strategies that improve college
completion through rapid scaling by
allowing larger awards in lower tiers for
college and university systems and
consortia that collaborate with leading
experts to test and rigorously evaluate
the most promising strategies at
multiple sites.
All FITW projects are required to use
part of their budgets to conduct
independent evaluations (as defined in
this notice) of their projects. This
ensures that projects funded under the
FITW program contribute significantly
to improving the information available
to practitioners and policymakers about
which practices work, for which types
of students, and in what contexts.
Program Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1138–
1138d.
Background: The proposed priorities,
requirements, selection criterion, and
definitions for the FITW program set
forth in this notice would better enable
the Department to achieve the purpose
and goals of the FITW program by
creating mechanisms to direct funding
to priority areas of work that address the
most important challenges in
postsecondary education and,
additionally, set evidence and
evaluation requirements. There are
currently no such program-specific
priorities, requirements, selection
criteria, or definitions for the FITW
program.
Proposed Priorities: This notice
contains nine proposed priorities. In
any grant competition under this
program, the Secretary may use,
individually or in combination, one or
more of these priorities or subparts of
these priorities, priorities from the final
supplemental priorities and definitions
for discretionary grant programs,
published in the Federal Register on
December 10, 2014 (79 FR 73425), and
priorities based on the statutory
requirements for the Fund for the
Improvement of Postsecondary
Education (FIPSE).
Background: The proposed priorities
correspond to what the Department
believes are the greatest current
challenges in postsecondary education
and most important areas of work
seeking to address barriers to
postsecondary student success. As
provided under 34 CFR 75.105, these
priorities may be used by the
Department as absolute or competitive
preference priorities in grant
competitions for the FITW program in
FY 2015 and later years to direct FITW
funds to projects that address these
identified challenges and areas of work.
In addition, we may also use priorities
from the Department’s final
supplemental priorities and definitions
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 35 / Monday, February 23, 2015 / Proposed Rules
for discretionary grant programs,
published in the Federal Register on
December 10, 2014 (79 FR 73425)
(Supplemental Priorities), as absolute or
competitive preference priorities in the
FITW program. Accordingly, we are not
proposing priorities in this notice that
are already included in the
Supplemental Priorities.
Establishing program-specific
priorities would provide the Department
the option to focus a particular year’s
FITW grant competition on any or all (or
none) of the policy areas set forth in
those priorities. For each year that new
funds are available under the FITW
program, the Department would
determine which, if any, of the priorities
to include in the grant competition.
The proposed priorities are organized
so that the Department has the
flexibility to determine the area of focus
for the priority. For example, with
respect to Proposed Priority 1—
Improving Success in Developmental
Education, the Department could
choose to include in a notice inviting
applications a competitive preference
priority for any type of project that seeks
to improve outcomes in developmental
education by using the broadest
language in the priority:
• (Example) Competitive Preference
Priority: Improving Success in
Developmental Education—Projects
designed to improve student success in
developmental education or accelerate
student progress into credit bearing
postsecondary courses.
Or, we could choose more specific
language from the priority to target a
particular aspect of developmental
education reform by choosing to also
include one of the subparts of Proposed
Priority 1:
• (Example) Competitive Preference
Priority: Improving Success in
Developmental Education—Projects
designed to improve student success in
developmental education or accelerate
student progress into credit bearing
postsecondary courses through
redesigning developmental education
courses or programs through strategies
such as contextualization of
developmental coursework together
with occupational or college-content
coursework.
We may also use priorities in
combination with each other in a notice
inviting applications. For example, a
competitive preference priority for low
cost, high impact strategies (Proposed
Priority 6—Implementing Low Cost-High
Impact Strategies to Improve Student
Outcomes) that influence non-cognitive
factors (Supplemental Priority 2—
Influencing the Development of Non-
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cognitive Factors) could be included as
follows:
• (Example) Competitive Preference
Priority: To meet this competitive
preference priority, an applicant must
meet both sections (A) and (B) of this
priority.
(A) Implementing Low Cost-High
Impact Strategies to Improve Student
Outcomes—Projects that use low cost
tools or strategies, such as those that use
technology, that result in a high impact
on student outcomes.
(B) Influencing the Development of
Non-cognitive Factors—Projects that are
designed to improve students’ mastery
of non-cognitive skills and behaviors
(such as academic behaviors, academic
mindset, perseverance, self-regulation,
social and emotional skills, and
approaches toward learning strategies)
and enhance student motivation and
engagement in learning.
With respect to the proposed
priorities, the Department is particularly
interested in brief comments responding
to the following questions:
• Do the proposed priorities
sufficiently address the greatest
challenges and barriers to postsecondary
student success?
• Do the subparts for each proposed
priority adequately capture the most
promising aspects of the policy topic
area of each priority?
Proposed Priorities:
The Assistant Secretary proposes the
following priorities for this program. In
any grant competition under this
program, the Secretary may use,
individually or in combination, one or
more of these priorities or subparts of
these priorities, priorities from the final
supplemental priorities and definitions
for discretionary grant programs,
published in the Federal Register on
December 10, 2014 (79 FR 73425), and
priorities based on the statutory
requirements for the Fund for the
Improvement of Postsecondary
Education (FIPSE).
Proposed Priority 1—Improving
Success in Developmental Education.
Background: ‘‘Developmental’’
courses are instructional courses,
typically non-credit bearing, designed
for students deficient in the general
competencies necessary for a regular
postsecondary curriculum. The most
common developmental courses to
which beginning students are referred
are math and reading/writing.9 It is
estimated that almost one-third of all
students take some form of
9 https://ccrc.tc.columbia.edu/media/k2/
attachments/referral-enrollment-completiondevelopmental.pdf.
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developmental course.10 While
participation rates vary widely across
States and institution types, lowincome, African-American, and
Hispanic students are referred to
developmental courses at much higher
rates.11 12 13
Developmental education is one of the
leading barriers to postsecondary
persistence and completion.14
Discouraged by the inability to enroll in
courses that will allow them to earn
credit and advance in their programs of
study, many students never even enroll
in the developmental courses to which
they are referred.15 For those students
that do enroll in developmental courses,
the majority do not complete them,
eventually dropping out of
postsecondary education altogether.16 17
Promising new practices in
developmental math education that
have shown greater learning gains and
success in credit-bearing coursework by
students indicate that the traditional
sequence, teaching, and content of
developmental coursework has been
ineffective in supporting student
mastery of the material.
A number of institutions are making
great effort to reform traditional
developmental education with
promising results that would benefit
from more rigorous evaluation, in part
to determine their effectiveness on
student performance, persistence, and
completion, but also to identify effective
implementation strategies. Further, for
the interventions that have produced
evidence of positive impacts on student
outcomes, almost none have been
replicated and evaluated at scale.
10 U.S. Department of Education, National Center
for Education Statistics, 2011–12 National
Postsecondary Student Aid Study (NPSAS:12),
Profile of Undergraduate Students 2011–12, Table
6.2. Report available at: https://nces.ed.gov/
pubs2015/2015167.pdf.
11 MDRC, Unlocking the Gate, June 2011. Article
available at: https://www.mdrc.org/sites/default/
files/full_595.pdf.
12 Attewell, P. A., Lavin, D. E., Domina, T., &
Levey, T. 2006. New Evidence on College
Remediation. The Journal of Higher Education.
Article available at: https://www.jstor.org/stable/
3838791.
13 https://ccrc.tc.columbia.edu/media/k2/
attachments/referral-enrollment-completiondevelopmental.pdf.
14 https://www.mdrc.org/sites/default/files/
full_595.pdf.
15 Complete College America. 2012. Remediation:
Higher Education’s Bridge to Nowhere. Report
available at: https://www.completecollege.org/
resources_and_reports/.
16 Complete College America. 2012. Remediation:
Higher Education’s Bridge to Nowhere.
17 Bailey, T. 2009. Challenge and Opportunity:
Rethinking the Role and Function of Developmental
Education in Community College. In New
Directions for Community Colleges. (Available
Article available at: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/
doi/10.1002/cc.352/pdf.
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Proposed Priority 1—Improving
Success in Developmental Education.
Proposed Priority: The Secretary gives
priority to:
(a) Projects designed to improve
student success in developmental
education or accelerate student progress
into credit bearing postsecondary
courses; or,
(b) Projects designed to improve
student success in developmental
education or accelerate student progress
into credit bearing postsecondary
courses through one or more of the
following:
(i) Identifying and treating academic
needs prior to postsecondary
enrollment, including while in middle
or high school, through strategies such
as partnerships between K–12 and
postsecondary institutions;
(ii) Diagnosing students’
developmental education needs at the
time of or after postsecondary
enrollment, such as by developing
alternatives to single measure placement
strategies, and identifying specific
content gaps in order to customize
instruction to an individual student’s
needs;
(iii) Offering alternative pathways in
mathematics, such as non-Algebra based
coursework for non-math and science
fields.
(iv) Accelerating students’ progress in
completing developmental education,
through strategies such as modularized,
fast-tracked, or self-paced courses or
placing students whose academic
performance is one or more levels below
that required for credit-bearing courses
into credit-bearing courses with
academic supports;
(v) Redesigning developmental
education courses or programs through
strategies such as contextualization of
developmental coursework together
with occupational or college-content
coursework;
(vi) Integrating academic and other
supports for students in developmental
education.
Proposed Priority 2—Improving
Teaching and Learning.
Background: A large percentage of
students in postsecondary education
struggle academically because they
arrive to college unprepared for collegelevel coursework.18 These struggles
18 Xianglei Chen and others, Academic
Preparation for College in the High School Senior
Class of 2003–04: Education Longitudinal Study of
2002 (ELS: 2002), Base-year, 2002, First Follow-up,
2004, and High School Transcript Study, 2004
(Washington: U.S. Department of Education,
National Center for Education Statistics, January
2010); Jay Greene and Greg Foster, ‘‘Public High
School Graduation and College Readiness Rates in
the United States,’’ Working Paper 3 (New York:
Manhattan Institute, Center for Civic Information,
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make the prospect of dropping out more
likely.19 Further, for students that do
complete, the limited available
information on learning proficiency
suggests that too many students are
lacking the critical thinking, analytical,
and communication skills needed for
the modern workforce.20 Some research
indicates that as much as a third of
students show no high-order cognitive
learning gains over the course of their
undergraduate educations.21
These deficits are accompanied by a
decline in productivity in higher
education. Controlling for inflation, the
cost of attending college has more than
doubled over the past three decades.22
Despite these challenges, which are
felt more acutely by the types of
students that now make up the majority
of students enrolled in postsecondary
education, adult learners, working
students, part-time students, students
from low-income backgrounds, students
of color, and first-generation students,
there has been little change in the
methods of teaching and instruction, as
well as how students experience
learning in college. With some
exceptions, the same degrees and other
credentials are offered in the same way,
by counting up the amount of hours
students are taught. Methods of teaching
have stayed largely static. Given the
poor outcomes many students are
experiencing, new approaches to
teaching and learning, using new tools
and strategies that can help customize
learning to accommodate diverse
learning styles, are needed at all levels
of postsecondary education to improve
Education, September 2003). Greene and Foster
define being minimally ‘‘college ready’’ as:
graduating from high school, having taken four
years of English, three years of mathematics, and
two years of science, social science, and foreign
language, and demonstrating basic literacy skills by
scoring at least 265 points on the National
Assessment of Educational Progress in reading.
19 Eric Bettinger and Bridget Terry Long,
‘‘Addressing the Needs of Under-Prepared College
Students: Does College Remediation Work?’’ Journal
of Human Resources 44, no. 3 (2009); Brian Jacob
and Lars Lefgren, ‘‘Remedial Education and Student
Achievement: A Regression-Discontinuity
Analysis,’’ Review of Economics and Statistics 86,
no. 1 (2004): 226–44.
20 Arum, Richard and Roksa, Josipa,
Academically Adrift: Limited Learning on College
Campuses (University of Chicago Press, January
2011).
21 Richard Arum and Josipa Roksa, ‘‘Are
Undergraduates Actually Learning Anything?’’
Chronicle of Higher Education, January 18, 2011.
Retrieved from: https://chronicle.com/article/AreUndergraduates-Actually/125979/.
22 National Center for Education Statistics.
‘‘Average undergraduate tuition and fees and room
and board rates charged for full-time students in
degree-granting institutions, by level and control of
institution: 1969–70 through 2011–12.’’ Retrieved
from: https://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d12/
tables/dt12_381.asp.
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accessibility and quality and reduce
cost.
Proposed Priority 2: Improving
Teaching and Learning.
The Secretary gives priority to:
(a) Projects designed to improve
teaching and learning; or,
(b) Projects designed to improve
teaching and learning through one or
more of the following:
(i) Instruction-level tools or strategies
such as adaptive learning technology,
educational games, personalized
learning, active- or project-based
learning, faculty-centered strategies that
systematically improve the quality of
teaching, or multi-disciplinary efforts
focused on improving instructional
experiences;
(ii) Program-level strategies such as
competency-based programs that are
designed with faculty, industry,
employer, and expert engagement, use
rigorous methods to define
competencies, and utilize externally
validated assessments, online or
blended programs, or joint offering of
programs across institutions;
(iii) Institution-level tools or strategies
such as faculty-centered strategies to
improve teaching across an institution,
use of open educational resources
across, or tailoring academic content
and delivery to serve the needs of nontraditional students.
Proposed Priority 3—Improving
Student Support Services.
Background: Almost all secondary
schools and institutions of higher
education offer a diverse array of
student support services to assist with
college preparation, application and
enrollment, financial aid, academic
barriers and other issues related to
access, persistence, and completion.
The range of services and support is
extensive, and include interventions
both inside and outside the classroom
and campus. Many of these services are
also provided by outside organizations,
including non-profits. Further, several
of the Department’s programs, including
TRIO, GEAR UP, and the Aid for
Institutional Development programs,
provide funding for student and
academic support services.
However, few student support
services strategies have been rigorously
evaluated. Given the need to improve
outcomes, particularly for adult
learners, working students, part-time
students, students from low-income
backgrounds, students of color, and
first-generation students, new and
innovative approaches are needed,
including those that are cost effective,
so that a greater number of students can
be served.
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Proposed Priority 3: Improving
Student Support Services.
The Secretary gives priority to:
(a) Projects designed to improve the
supports or services provided to
students prior to or during the students’
enrollment in postsecondary education;
or,
(b) Projects designed to improve the
supports or services provided to
students prior to or during the students’
enrollment in postsecondary education
through one or more of the following:
(i) Integrating student support
services, including with academic
advising and instruction;
(ii) Individualizing or personalizing
support services such as advising,
coaching, tutoring, or mentoring to
students and their identified needs
using tools or strategies such as
predictive analytics to identify students
who may need specific supports, or
behavioral interventions used to provide
timely, relevant, and actionable
information for students at critical
points such as when they may be at risk
of dropping out;
(iii) Connecting students to resources
or services other than those typically
provided by postsecondary institutions,
such as providing assistance in
accessing government benefits,
transportation assistance, medical,
health, or nutritional resources and
services, child care, housing, or legal
services;
(iv) Utilizing technology such as
digital messaging to provide supports or
services systematically.
Proposed Priority 4—Developing and
Using Assessments of Learning.
Background: Learning assessment has
shown promise as an effective
instructional strategy to increase student
success. While learning assessment, in
the past, focused more on traditional
testing, current assessment has
expanded to assess not just what
students know but also what they can
do. Further, a knowledge-based
economy requires assessment of higherorder thinking skills such as recall,
analysis, comparison, inference,
application, and evaluation. New forms
of assessments must be developed for
these purposes. Assessments are also
needed to measure what is learned
outside the classroom, such as through
previous work experience.
Proposed Priority 4: Developing and
Using Assessments of Learning.
The Secretary gives priority to:
(a) Projects that support the
development and use of externally
validated assessments of student
learning and stated learning goals; or,
(b) Projects that support the
development and use of externally
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validated assessments of student
learning and stated learning goals
through one or more of the following:
(i) Alternative assessment tools or
strategies such as micro- or competencybased assessments, assessments
embedded in curriculum, or
simulations, games, or other technologybased assessment approaches;
(ii) Professional development or
training of faculty on the approaches to
developing, using, and interpreting
assessments;
(iii) Combining or sequencing
assessments from multiple sources to
strengthen diagnostic capabilities;
(iv) Aligning assessments across
sectors and institutions, such as across
kindergarten through grade 12 and
postsecondary education systems or
across 2-year and 4-year institutions, to
improve college-readiness and content
delivery;
(v) Open-source assessments.
Proposed Priority 5—Facilitating
Pathways to Credentialing and Transfer.
Background: Students obtain
knowledge and skills through a variety
of experiences and from a range of
institutions and providers. Many
postsecondary students attend more
than one institution on their way to
earning a certificate or degree. Although
increasing numbers of States and
educational institutions are entering
into articulation agreements to facilitate
credit transfer, too many students
continue to lose time and incur
additional expense due to lost credits
when transferring between institutions.
Further, many student learning
experiences, such as learning that
occurs through work experience or from
non-traditional education providers, are
simply not recognized.
Alternate systems and methods of
assessing, aggregating, and credentialing
learning experiences are needed to help
more students reach completion in
accelerated timeframes. Additionally,
new systems of portable, stackable
postsecondary degrees and credentials
along transparent career pathways must
be designed and opportunities to obtain
such degrees and credential must be
expanded.
Proposed Priority 5: Facilitating
Pathways to Credentialing and Transfer.
The Secretary gives priority to:
(a) Projects designed to develop and
implement systems and practices to
capture and aggregate credit or other
evidence of knowledge and skills
towards postsecondary degrees or
credentials; or,
(b) Projects designed to develop and
implement systems and practices to
capture and aggregate credit or other
evidence of knowledge and skills
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towards postsecondary degrees or
credentials through one or more of the
following:
(i) Seamless transfer of credits
between postsecondary institutions;
(ii) Validation and transfer of credit
for learning or learning experiences
from non-institutional sources;
(iii) Alternate credentialing or badging
frameworks;
(iv) Opportunities for students to earn
college credits prior to postsecondary
enrollment, such as through dual
enrollment, dual degree, dual
admission, or early college programs.
Proposed Priority 6—Increasing the
Effectiveness of Financial Aid.
Background: The federal government,
States, and institutions make a wide
range of financial aid in the form of
grants, loans, and tax credits available to
students pursuing postsecondary
education. Evidence shows that
lowering the costs of college, the result
of student aid, can improve access and
completion.23 Indeed, since the
adoption of the Higher Education Act
almost 50 years ago, average aid per
student has more than tripled, from
$3,347 in 1971–72 to $12,455 in 2010–
11 (in constant 2010 dollars), while fulltime equivalent enrollment has more
than doubled, from about 6.2 million in
1971–72 to 14.2 million in 2010–11.24
But, this conclusion is not without
exception. Due to the numerous types of
aid that are available, the range of
sources, and the detailed application
process, the financial aid system is
complex. This complexity may have the
unintended effect of creating barriers to
access, one of the very problems that
financial aid is designed to address.
Further, some types of aid may have a
greater impact on outcomes than others,
achievement incentives may help
improve persistence and completion,
and in the case of loans, levels of debt
may influence student decisions. In
general, the effectiveness of financial
aid is impacted by a number of factors
including the design and delivery of aid
programs, the level of understanding by
students and families of costs and
availability of aid, and the ability of
students and families to navigate the
application process and make optimal
decisions. New and innovative
strategies and tools that address these
realities to maximize the effectiveness of
financial aid are needed.
23 Dynarski, S.(2003). Does Aid Matter?
Measuring the Effects of Student Aid on College
Attendance and Completion. American Economic
Review.
24 Dynarski, S., & Scott-Clayton, J. (2013).
Financial aid policy: Lessons from Research. The
Future of Children. Postsecondary Education in the
United States. Vol 23. No. 1.
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Proposed Priority 6: Increasing the
Effectiveness of Financial Aid. The
Secretary gives priority to:
(a) Projects designed to improve the
effectiveness of financial aid.
(b) Projects designed to improve the
effectiveness of financial aid through
one or more of the following:
(i) Counseling, advising, creation of
information and resources, and other
support activities on higher education
financing and financial literacy
delivered by financial aid offices or
integrated with other support services
provided by institutions, including on
student loan repayment options such as
income driven repayment plans and
public service loan forgiveness and debt
management;
(ii) Personalized approaches to
financial aid delivery, counseling,
advising, and other support activities
which may include early warning
systems, use of predictive analytics,
need based aid, emergency aid, or
bonuses or other incentives for
successful outcomes such as on-time
academic progress and completion.
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Note: As with any project supported by the
FITW program, grantees may not disburse
project funds under this priority to students
for the purpose of providing student aid.
FITW funds may be used to pay project costs
such as costs for the design, administration,
and evaluation of aid programs or financial
aid strategies.
Proposed Priority 7—Implementing
Low Cost-High Impact Strategies To
Improve Student Outcomes.
Background: Given the limited
resources of secondary schools,
institutions of higher education, and
other relevant stakeholders, the cost
effectiveness of any intervention
designed to improve student outcomes
is of primary importance. In recent
years, numerous institutions,
researchers, and others have begun
testing interventions that are relatively
low cost but have the ability to have a
high impact on student outcomes. Many
of these interventions minimize cost
through the use of technology, such as
digital messaging. Others incorporate
low cost approaches, such as noncognitive interventions. We are
particularly interested in effective low
cost interventions because even
institutions with limited resources
would be able to scale such strategies to
impact large numbers of students, and,
such interventions, particularly those
that use technology, are often easily
replicable. This proposed priority could
be used in combination with other
priorities.
Proposed Priority 7: Implementing
Low Cost-High Impact Strategies To
Improve Student Outcomes. The
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Secretary gives priority to projects that
use low cost tools or strategies, such as
those that use technology, that result in
a high impact on student outcomes.
Proposed Priority 8—Improving
Postsecondary Student Outcomes at
Minority-Serving Institutions.
Background: Minority-serving
institutions (MSIs) (as defined in this
notice), including Historically Black
Colleges and Universities (HBCUs),
enroll a significant and disproportionate
share of students from low-income
backgrounds, students of color, and
first-generation students. As the goal of
the FITW program is to identify
strategies that work in improving the
postsecondary outcomes of these
students, and because, in some cases,
MSIs face unique challenges, it is
important that the FITW program
supports projects at MSIs. Accordingly,
the Department proposes this priority to
prioritize projects at MSIs. This
proposed priority could be used as an
absolute priority to set aside a specific
amount of funds to support projects at
MSIs, or to give competitive preference
points to applicants that are MSIs. The
lead applicant under this proposed
priority must be an MSI.
Proposed Priority 8: Improving
Postsecondary Student Outcomes at
Minority-Serving Institutions. The
Secretary gives priority to projects
designed to improve student outcomes
at Minority-Serving Institutions (as
defined in this notice).
Proposed Priority 9—Systems and
Consortia Focused on Large-Scale
Impact.
Background: The Department is
including this proposed priority to
encourage the formation of college
consortia and systems that can
collaborate with leading experts to
implement promising strategies that
address key barriers to completion. This
would allow applicants to increase the
number of students participating in or
impacted by a project and would allow
for development, testing, and robust
evaluation of projects at multiple sites
whose results could be more rapidly
generalized and applied to other
institutions. While Validation and
Scale-up projects would be designed to
serve relatively larger numbers of
students across multiple institutions,
Development projects may be more
limited in scope so long as they have the
sample size necessary to meet the
proposed requirements for evaluation
design described below. Encouraging
greater collaboration with other
institutions and partners would enable
postsecondary institutions and systems
to expand the number of students
served by a project, more rapidly
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improve the quality and applicability of
the evidence produced from the
required evaluations, and encourage
efforts in the field to work across
networks to share emergent effective
practices across the higher education
enterprise.
Proposed Priority 9: Systems and
Consortia Focused on Large-Scale
Impact. The Secretary gives priority to
projects that involve consortia of
institutions, including across a college
or university system, and partnerships
with leading experts that are
implemented at multiple sites with large
sample sizes to allow for more rapid
development, evaluation, and scaling of
practices determined to be effective.
Types of Priorities:
When inviting applications for a
competition using one or more
priorities, we designate the type of each
priority as absolute, competitive
preference, or invitational through a
notice in the Federal Register. The
effect of each type of priority follows:
Absolute priority: Under an absolute
priority, we consider only applications
that meet the priority (34 CFR
75.105(c)(3)).
Competitive preference priority:
Under a competitive preference priority,
we give competitive preference to an
application by (1) awarding additional
points, depending on the extent to
which the application meets the priority
(34 CFR 75.105(c)(2)(i)); or (2) selecting
an application that meets the priority
over an application of comparable merit
that does not meet the priority (34 CFR
75.105(c)(2)(ii)).
Invitational priority: Under an
invitational priority, we are particularly
interested in applications that meet the
priority. However, we do not give an
application that meets the priority a
preference over other applications (34
CFR 75.105(c)(1)).
Proposed Requirements, Selection
Criterion, and Definitions:
This notice contains eight proposed
requirements, one proposed selection
criterion, and three proposed
definitions.
Background: The proposed
requirements, selection criterion, and
definitions would allow the Department
to set the eligibility, evidence, and
evaluation expectations for grant
recipients under the FITW program. We
may also use requirements, selection
criteria, or definitions from 34 CFR parts
75 and 77 and other sections of the
Education Department General
Administrative Regulations (EDGAR).
Accordingly, we are not proposing
requirements, selection criteria, and
definitions in this notice that are
already included in EDGAR.
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The Department may award three
types of grants under this program:
‘‘Development’’ grants, ‘‘Validation’’
grants, and ‘‘Scale-up’’ grants. These
grants differ in terms of the level of
prior evidence of effectiveness required
for consideration of funding, the level of
scale the funded project should reach,
and, consequently, the amount of
funding available to support the project.
We provide an overview to clarify our
expectations for each grant type:
(1) Development grants provide
funding to support the development or
testing of processes, products, strategies,
or practices that are supported by
relatively less evidence, likely strong
theory (as defined in 34 CFR 77.1(c)) or
evidence of promise (as defined in 34
CFR 77.1(c)), and whose efficacy should
be systematically studied. Development
grants would support new or
substantially more effective practices for
addressing widely shared challenges.
Development projects are novel and
significant nationally, not projects that
simply implement existing practices in
additional locations or support needs
that are primarily local in nature.
All Development grantees must
evaluate the effectiveness of the project
at the level of scale required in the
notice inviting applications under
which they applied.
(2) Validation grants provide funding
to expand projects supported by greater
evidence than would be required for a
development grant, likely moderate
evidence of effectiveness (as defined in
34 CFR 77.1(c)), to multiple sites such
as multiple institutions. Validation
grants must further assess the
effectiveness of the FITW-supported
practice through a rigorous evaluation,
with particular focus on the populations
for and the contexts in which the
practice is most effective. We expect
and consider it appropriate that each
applicant would propose to use the
Validation funding to build its capacity
to deliver the FITW-supported practice,
particularly early in the funding period,
to successfully reach the level of scale
proposed in its application.
Additionally, we expect each applicant
to address any specific barriers to the
growth or scaling of the organization or
practice (including barriers related to
cost-effectiveness) in order to deliver
the FITW-supported practice at the
proposed level of scale and provide
strategies to address these barriers as
part of its proposed scaling plan.
All Validation grantees must evaluate
the effectiveness of the practice that the
supported project implements and
expands. We expect that these
evaluations would be conducted in a
variety of contexts and for a variety of
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students, would identify the core
elements of the practice, and would
codify the practices to support adoption
or replication by the applicant and other
entities.
(3) Scale-up grants provide funding to
expand projects supported by greater
evidence than would be required for
Development or Validation grants, likely
strong evidence of effectiveness (as
defined in 34 CFR 77.1(c)), and to a
larger number of sites than would be
required for a Development or
Validation grant, such as across a
system of institutions, across
institutions in a State, a region, or
nationally, or across institutions in a
labor market sector. In addition to
improving outcomes for an increasing
number of high-need students, Scale-up
grants will generate information about
the students and contexts for which a
practice is most effective. We expect
that Scale-up grants would increase
practitioners’ and policymakers’
understanding of strategies that allow
organizations or practices to expand
quickly and efficiently while
maintaining their effectiveness.
Similar to Validation grants, all Scaleup grantees must evaluate the
effectiveness of the FITW-supported
practice that the project implements and
expands; this is particularly important
in instances in which the proposed
project includes changing the FITWsupported practice in order to more
efficiently reach the proposed level of
scale (for example, by developing
technology-enabled training tools). The
evaluation of a Scale-up grant must
identify the core elements of, and
codify, the FITW-supported practice
that the project implements to support
adoption or replication by other entities.
We also expect that evaluations of
Scale-up grants would be conducted in
a variety of contexts and for a variety of
students in order to determine the
context(s) and population(s) for which
the FITW-supported practice is most
effective.
With respect to the proposed
requirements, selection criterion, and
definitions, the Department is
particularly interested in brief
comments responding to the following
questions:
• Are there a sufficient number of
postsecondary strategies or
interventions addressing important
challenges in postsecondary education
that are supported by moderate
evidence of effectiveness (as defined in
34 CFR 77.1(c)), the likely evidence
standard requirement that would be
assigned by the Department to a
competition for Validation grants, to
warrant making Validation grants
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available in the FY 2015 FITW grant
competition? The Department
encourages commenters responding to
this question to provide citations or
links to any studies they believe would
meet the moderate evidence of
effectiveness standard.
• Are there a sufficient number of
postsecondary strategies or
interventions addressing important
challenges in postsecondary education
that are supported by strong evidence of
effectiveness (as defined in 34 CFR
77.1(c)), the likely evidence standard
requirement that would be assigned by
the Department to a competition for
Scale-up grants, to warrant making
Scale-up grants available in the FY 2015
FITW grant competition? The
Department encourages commenters
responding to this question to provide
citations or links to any studies they
believe would meet the strong evidence
of effectiveness standard.
• Which of the proposed priorities
should be included as absolute or
competitive preference priorities in the
FY 2015 FITW program grant
competition?
Proposed Requirements:
The Assistant Secretary proposes the
following requirements for this program.
We may apply one or more of these
requirements in any year in which this
program is in effect.
1. Innovations that Improve Outcomes
for High-Need Students: The Secretary
may require that—
(a) Grantees must implement projects
designed to improve outcomes of highneed students (as defined in this notice)
in postsecondary education; or,
(b) Grantees must implement projects
designed to improve one or more of the
following outcomes of high-need
students (as defined in this notice) in
postsecondary education:
(i) Persistence;
(ii) Academic progress;
(iii) Time to degree; or,
(iv) Completion.
2. Eligibility: The Secretary may make
grants to, or enter into contracts with,
one or more of the following:
(a) A public or private non-profit
institution of higher education, a public or
private non-profit institution, or
combinations of such institutions; or,
(b) A public or private non-profit agency.
The Secretary will announce the
eligible applicants in the NIA.
Note: Section 741 of the HEA provides
that, under the FIPSE, the Secretary is
authorized to make grants to, or enter into
contracts with, institutions of higher
education, combinations of such institutions,
and other public and private nonprofit
institutions and agencies. The requirement
for eligibility simply restates these statutory
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provisions. In any grant competition under
this program, the Department could choose to
allow applications from one or more of the
eligible entities, including public or private
non-profit educational institutions that are
not institutions of higher education as
defined under the HEA and public agencies
or third party non-profit organizations or
entities.
3. Types of FITW grants: Awards may
be made for Development grants,
Validation grants, and Scale-up grants.
The Secretary will announce the type of
grants that applicants may apply for in
the NIA.
4. Evidence and Sample Size
Standards: To be eligible for an award—
(a) An application for a Development
grant must be supported by one of the
following:
(i) Evidence of promise (as defined in
34 CFR 77.1(c));
(ii) Strong theory (as defined in 34
CFR 77.1(c)); or
(iii) Evidence of promise or strong
theory.
The Secretary will announce in the
notice inviting applications which
evidence standard will apply to a
Development grant in a given
competition. Under (a)(iii), applicants
must identify whether their application
is supported by evidence of promise or
strong theory.
(b) An application for a Validation
grant must be supported by moderate
evidence of effectiveness (as defined in
34 CFR 77.1(c)).
(c) An application for a Scale-up grant
must be supported by strong evidence of
effectiveness (as defined in 34 CFR
77.1(c)).
(d) The Secretary may require that an
application for a Development grant,
Validation grant, or Scale-up grant must
be supported by one or more of the
following levels of sample size:
(i) Large sample (as defined in 34 CFR
77.1(c));
(ii) Multi-site sample (as defined in 34
CFR 77.1(c)), such as at multiple
institutions; or
(iii) Scaled multi-site sample, such as
across a system of institutions, across
institutions in a State, a region, or
nationally, or across institutions in a
labor market sector.
The Secretary will announce in the
NIA which sample size standards will
apply to each type of FITW grant
(Development, Validation, or Scale-up)
that is available.
(e) Where evidence of promise,
moderate evidence of effectiveness, or
strong evidence of effectiveness is
required to receive a grant, an
applicant’s project must propose to
implement the core aspects of the
process, product, strategy, or practice
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from their supporting study as closely as
possible. Where modifications to a cited
process, product, strategy, or practice
will be made to account for student or
institutional characteristics, resource
limitations, or other special factors or to
address deficiencies identified by the
cited study, the applicant must provide
a justification or basis for the
modifications. Modifications may not be
proposed to the core aspects of any cited
process, product, strategy, or practice.
5. Evaluation:
(a) The grantee must conduct an
Independent Evaluation (as defined in
this notice) of its project. The evaluation
must estimate the impact of the FITWsupported practice (as implemented at
the proposed level of scale) on a
relevant outcome (as defined in 34 CFR
77.1(c)).
(b) The evaluation design for a
Development grant, Validation grant, or
Scale-up grant must meet one or either
of the following standards:
(i) What Works Clearing Standards
without reservations (as defined in 34
CFR 77.1(c)); or
(ii) What Works Clearinghouse
Standards with reservations (as defined
in 34 CFR 77.1(c)).
The Secretary will announce in the
NIA the evaluation standard(s) that will
apply to each type of FITW grant
(Development, Validation, or Scale-up)
that is available.
(c) The grantee must make broadly
available digitally and free of charge,
through formal (e.g., peer-reviewed
journals) or informal (e.g., newsletters)
mechanisms, the results of any
evaluations it conducts of its funded
activities. The grantee must also ensure
that the data from its evaluation are
made available to third-party
researchers consistent with applicable
privacy requirements.
(d) The grantee and its independent
evaluator must agree to cooperate on an
ongoing basis with any technical
assistance provided by the Department
or its contractor, including any
technical assistance provided to ensure
that the evaluation design meets the
required evaluation standards, and
comply with the requirements of any
evaluation of the program conducted by
the Department. This includes
providing to the Department, within 100
days of a grant award, an updated
comprehensive evaluation plan in a
format and using such tools as the
Department may require. Grantees must
update this evaluation plan at least
annually to reflect any changes to the
evaluation and provide the updated
evaluation plan to the Department. All
of these updates must be consistent with
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the scope and objectives of the approved
application.
6. Funding Categories: An applicant
will be considered for an award only for
the type of FITW grant (Development,
Validation, and Scale-up) for which it
applies. An applicant may not submit
an application for the same proposed
project under more than one type of
grant.
7. Limit on Grant Awards: The
Secretary may choose to deny the award
of a grant to an applicant if the
applicant already holds an active FITW
grant from a previous FITW competition
or, if awarded, would result in the
applicant receiving more than one FITW
grant in the same year.
8. Management Plan: Within 100 days
of a grant award, the grantee must
provide an updated comprehensive
management plan for the approved
project in a format and using such tools
as the Department may require. This
management plan must include detailed
information about implementation of
the first year of the grant, including key
milestones, staffing details, and other
information that the Department may
require. It must also include a complete
list of performance metrics, including
baseline measures and annual targets.
The grantee must update this
management plan at least annually to
reflect implementation of subsequent
years of the project and provide the
updated management plan to the
Department.
Proposed Selection Criterion:
The Assistant Secretary proposes the
following selection criterion for
evaluating an application under this
program. We may apply this criterion or
any of the selection criteria from 34 CFR
part 75 in any year in which this
program is in effect. In the notice
inviting applications, the application
package, or both, we will announce the
maximum points assigned to each
selection criteria.
1. Collaborations: The extent to which
the proposed project is designed to
engage individuals or entities with
expertise, experience, and knowledge
regarding the project’s activities, such as
postsecondary institutions, non-profit
organizations, experts, academics, and
practitioners.
Note: This proposed selection criterion—
Collaborations—would assess the extent to
which applicants collaborate with
knowledgeable or experienced parties in
designing and implementing their projects. It
is intended to encourage such collaboration
in order to increase the quality of an
application and project. The purpose of the
Collaborations selection criterion is distinct
from the purpose of Proposed Priority 8—
Implementing Partnerships Focused on
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Large-scale Impact, which focuses on
increasing impact. The proposed selection
criterion for Collaborations would not assess
scope of impact. Rather, it would determine
whether an applicant has engaged relevant
third party experts in designing the project.
Proposed Definitions:
The Assistant Secretary proposes the
following definitions for this program.
We may apply one or more of these
definitions in any year in which this
program is in effect.
1. High-need student means a student
at risk of education failure or otherwise
in need of special assistance and
support such as adult learners, working
students, part-time students, students
from low-income backgrounds, students
of color, first-generation students, and
students who are English learners.
2. Independent evaluation means an
evaluation that is designed and carried
out independent of and external to the
grantee, but in coordination with, any
employees of the grantee who develop
a process, product, strategy, or practice
and are implementing it.
3. Minority-serving institution means
an institution that is eligible to receive
assistance under sections 316 through
320 of part A of Title III, under part B
of Title III, or under Title V of the HEA.
Final Priorities, Requirements,
Selection Criterion, and Definitions:
We will announce the final priorities,
requirements, selection criterion, and
definitions in a notice in the Federal
Register. We will determine the final
priorities, requirements, selection
criterion, and definitions after
considering responses to this notice and
other information available to the
Department. This notice does not
preclude us from proposing additional
priorities, requirements, definitions, or
selection criteria, subject to meeting
applicable rulemaking requirements.
Note: This notice does not solicit
applications. In any year in which we choose
to use one or more of these priorities,
requirements, selection criterion, and
definitions, we invite applications through a
notice in the Federal Register.
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
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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
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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 is not
a significant regulatory action subject to
review by OMB under section 3(f) of
Executive Order 12866.
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
on 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
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
PO 00000
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
might result from technological
innovation or anticipated behavioral
changes.’’
We are issuing these proposed
priorities, requirements, selection
criterion, and definitions only upon 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
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
are those resulting from statutory
requirements and those we have
determined as necessary for
administering the Department’s
programs and activities.
Intergovernmental Review: This
program is subject to Executive Order
12372 and the regulations in 34 CFR
part 79. One of the objectives of the
Executive order is to foster an
intergovernmental partnership and a
strengthened federalism. The Executive
order relies on processes developed by
State and local governments for
coordination and review of proposed
Federal financial assistance.
This document provides early
notification of our specific plans and
actions for this program.
Accessible Format: Individuals with
disabilities can obtain this document in
an accessible format (e.g., braille, large
print, audiotape, or compact disc) on
request to the program contact 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
E:\FR\FM\23FEP1.SGM
23FEP1
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 35 / Monday, February 23, 2015 / Proposed Rules
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.
Dated: February 13, 2015.
Ted Mitchell,
Under Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2015–03502 Filed 2–20–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R10–OAR–2013–0581; FRL–9923–37–
Region 10]
Approval and Promulgation of
Implementation Plans; Idaho:
Interstate Transport of Fine Particulate
Matter
Environmental Protection
Agency.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Clean Air Act (CAA)
requires each State Implementation Plan
(SIP) to contain adequate provisions
prohibiting air emissions that will have
certain adverse air quality effects in
other states. On June 28, 2010, the State
of Idaho submitted a SIP revision to the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
to address these interstate transport
requirements with respect to the 2006
24-hour fine particulate matter (PM2.5)
National Ambient Air Quality Standards
(NAAQS). The EPA is proposing to find
that Idaho has adequately addressed
certain CAA interstate transport
requirements for the 2006 24-hour PM2.5
NAAQS.
DATES: Written comments must be
received on or before March 25, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R10–
OAR–2013–0581, by any of the
following methods:
• www.regulations.gov: Follow the
on-line instructions for submitting
comments.
• Email: R10-Public_Comments@
epa.gov.
• Mail: Kristin Hall, EPA Region 10,
Office of Air, Waste and Toxics (AWT–
150), 1200 Sixth Avenue Suite 900,
Seattle, WA 98101.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: EPA Region
10 9th Floor Mailroom, 1200 Sixth
Avenue Suite 900, Seattle, WA 98101.
Attention: Kristin Hall, Office of Air,
Waste and Toxics, AWT—150. Such
deliveries are only accepted during
normal hours of operation, and special
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SUMMARY:
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13:55 Feb 20, 2015
Jkt 235001
arrangements should be made for
deliveries of boxed information.
Instructions: Direct your comments to
Docket ID No. EPA–R10–OAR–2013–
0581. The EPA’s policy is that all
comments received will be included in
the public docket without change and
may be made available online at
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided, unless
the comment includes information
claimed to be Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute.
Do not submit information that you
consider to be CBI or otherwise
protected through www.regulations.gov
or email. The www.regulations.gov Web
site is an ‘‘anonymous access’’ system,
which means the EPA will not know
your identity or contact information
unless you provide it in the body of
your comment. If you send an email
comment directly to the EPA without
going through www.regulations.gov your
email address will be automatically
captured and included as part of the
comment that is placed in the public
docket and made available on the
Internet. If you submit an electronic
comment, the EPA recommends that
you include your name and other
contact information in the body of your
comment and with any disk or CD–ROM
you submit. If the EPA cannot read your
comment due to technical difficulties
and cannot contact you for clarification,
the EPA may not be able to consider
your comment. Electronic files should
avoid the use of special characters, any
form of encryption, and be free of any
defects or viruses.
Docket: All documents in the docket
are listed in the www.regulations.gov
index. Although listed in the index,
some information is not publicly
available, e.g., CBI or other information
the disclosure of which is restricted by
statute. Certain other material, such as
copyrighted material, is not placed on
the Internet and will be publicly
available only in hard copy. Publicly
available docket materials are available
either electronically in
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy
during normal business hours at the
Office of Air, Waste and Toxics, EPA
Region 10, 1200 Sixth Avenue, Seattle,
WA 98101.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kristin Hall at (206) 553–6357,
hall.kristin@epa.gov, or the above EPA,
Region 10 address.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document wherever
‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’ or ‘‘our’’ is used, it is
intended to refer to the EPA.
Information is organized as follows:
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9423
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. 2006 24-Hour PM2.5 NAAQS and
Interstate Transport
B. Rules Addressing Interstate Transport
for the 2006 24-Hour PM2.5 NAAQS
C. Guidance
II. State Submittal
III. EPA Evaluation
A. Identification of Nonattainment and
Maintenance Receptors
B. Evaluation of Significant Contribution to
Nonattainment
C. Evaluation of Interference With
Maintenance
IV. Proposed Action
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Background
A. 2006 24-Hour PM2.5 NAAQS and
Interstate Transport
On September 21, 2006, the EPA
promulgated a final rule revising the
1997 24-hour primary and secondary
NAAQS for PM2.5 from 65 micrograms
per cubic meter (mg/m3) to 35 mg/m3
(October 17, 2006, 71 FR 61144).
Section 110(a)(1) of the CAA requires
each state to submit to the EPA, within
three years (or such shorter period as
the Administrator may prescribe) after
the promulgation of a primary or
secondary NAAQS or any revision
thereof, a SIP that provides for the
‘‘implementation, maintenance, and
enforcement’’ of such NAAQS. The EPA
refers to these specific submittals as
‘‘infrastructure’’ SIPs because they are
intended to address basic structural SIP
requirements for new or revised
NAAQS. For the 2006 24-hour PM2.5
NAAQS, these infrastructure SIPs were
due on September 21, 2009. CAA
section 110(a)(2) includes a list of
specific elements that ‘‘[e]ach such plan
submission’’ must meet.
The interstate transport provisions in
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i) (also called
‘‘good neighbor’’ provisions) require
each state to submit a SIP that prohibits
emissions that will have certain adverse
air quality effects in other states. CAA
section 110(a)(2)(D)(i) identifies four
distinct elements related to the impacts
of air pollutants transported across state
lines. In this action, the EPA is
addressing the first two elements of this
section, specified at CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I),1 for the 2006 24-hour
PM2.5 NAAQS.
1 This proposed action does not address the two
elements of the interstate transport SIP provision in
CAA section 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(II) regarding
interference with measures required to prevent
significant deterioration of air quality or to protect
visibility in another state. We previously approved
the Idaho SIP for purposes of CAA section
110(a)(2)(D)(I)(II) for the 2006 24-hour PM2.5
NAAQS on July 14, 2014 (79 FR 40662).
E:\FR\FM\23FEP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 35 (Monday, February 23, 2015)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 9414-9423]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-03502]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
34 CFR Chapter VI
Proposed Priorities, Requirements, Selection Criterion, and
Definitions--First in the World Program
CFDA Numbers: 84.116F and 84.116X
AGENCY: Office of Postsecondary Education, Department of Education.
ACTION: Proposed priorities, requirements, selection criterion, and
definitions.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Assistant Secretary for Postsecondary Education proposes
priorities, requirements, a selection criterion, and definitions under
the First in the World (FITW) Program. The Assistant Secretary may use
these priorities, requirements, selection criterion, and definitions
for FITW competitions in fiscal year (FY) 2015 and later years. These
priorities, requirements, selection criterion, and definitions would
enable the Department to focus the FITW program on identified barriers
to student success in postsecondary education and advance the program's
purpose to build evidence for what works in postsecondary education
through development, evaluation, and dissemination of innovative
strategies to support students who are at risk of failure in persisting
in and completing their postsecondary programs of study.
DATES: We must receive your comments on or before March 25, 2015.
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.
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 Frank Frankfort, U.S. Department of Education, 1990 K Street
NW., Room 6166, Washington, DC 20006.
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: Frank Frankfort. Telephone: (202) 502-
7513 or email: frank.frankfort@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:
Invitation to Comment: We invite you to submit comments regarding
this notice. To ensure that your comments have maximum effect in
developing the notice of final priorities, requirements, selection
criterion, and definitions, we urge you to identify clearly the
specific proposed priority, requirement, selection criterion or
definition 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 priorities, requirements, selection criterion, or definitions.
Please let us know of any further ways we could reduce potential costs
or increase potential benefits while preserving the effective and
efficient administration of the program.
During and after the comment period, you may inspect all public
comments about this notice by accessing Regulations.gov. You may also
inspect the comments in person in room 6164, 1990 K. St. NW.,
Washington, DC between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.,
Washington, DC time, Monday through Friday of each week except Federal
holidays. 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 notice. If you want to schedule an
appointment for this type of accommodation or auxiliary aid, please
contact the person listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
Purpose of Program: Earning a postsecondary degree or credential is
a prerequisite for the growing jobs of the new economy and the clearest
pathway to the middle class. Average earnings of college graduates are
almost twice as high as that of workers with only a high school diploma
and, over this decade, employment in jobs requiring education beyond a
high school diploma will grow more rapidly than employment in jobs that
do not.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Carnavale, A., Smith, N., Strohl, J., Help Wanted:
Projections of Jobs and Education Requirements Through 2018.
Georgetown Center on Education and the Workforce, 2010.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 9415]]
But today, even though college enrollment has increased by 50
percent since 1990, from almost 14 million students to almost 21
million students, and despite the importance of a postsecondary
education to financial security for American families and for the
national economy to grow and remain competitive in the global economy,
only 40 percent of Americans hold a postsecondary degree.\2\ While the
vast majority of high school graduates from the wealthiest American
families continue on to higher education, only half of high school
graduates from the poorest families attend college.\3\ About 60 percent
of students at four-year institutions earn a bachelor's degree within
six years.\4\ For low-income students, the prospects are even worse as
only 40 percent reach completion.\5\ Almost 37 million Americans report
``some college, no degree'' as their highest level of education.\6\ Due
to these outcomes, the U.S. has been outpaced internationally in higher
education. In 1990, the U.S. ranked first in the world in four-year
degree attainment among 25-34 year olds; in 2012, the U.S. ranked
12th.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ National Center for Education Statistics. ``Total fall
enrollment in degree-granting postsecondary institutions, by
attendance status, sex of student, and control of institution:
Selected years, 1947 through 2012.'' Retrieved from: https://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d13/tables/dt13_303.10.asp.
\3\ National Center for Education Statistics. ``Percentage of
recent high school completers enrolled in 2-year and 4-year
colleges, by income level: 1975 through 2012.'' Retrieved from:
https://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d13/tables/dt13_302.30.asp.
\4\ National Center for Education Statistics. ``Percentage
distribution of first-time postsecondary students starting at 2- and
4-year institutions during the 2003-04 academic year, by highest
degree attained, enrollment status, and selected characteristics:
Spring 2009.'' Retrieved from: https://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d13/tables/dt13_326.40.asp.
\5\ Id.
\6\ U.S. Census Bureau, 2012 American Community Survey.
\7\ Organization of Economic Co-operation and Development,
Education at a Glance 2014.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Recognizing these factors, President Obama set a goal for the
country that America will once again have the highest proportion of
college graduates in the world. To support this national effort, the
Administration has outlined a comprehensive agenda that includes
expanding opportunity and increasing quality at all levels of
education, from early learning through higher education. The FITW
program is a key part of this agenda.
Unlike in previous generations, adult learners, working students,
part-time students, students from low-income backgrounds, students of
color, and first-generation students now make up the majority of
students in college.\8\ Ensuring that these students persist in and
complete their postsecondary education is essential to meeting our
nation's educational challenges. However, the traditional methods and
practices of the country's higher education system have typically not
been focused on ensuring successful outcomes for these students, and
too little is known about what strategies are most effective for
addressing key barriers that prevent these students from persisting and
completing.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ U.S. Department of Education. 2010. Profile of Undergraduate
Students: 2007-08. National Center for Education Statistics: 2010-
205. Washington DC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FITW program addresses these problems by supporting the
development of innovative solutions to persistent and widespread
challenges in postsecondary education, particularly those that affect
adult learners, working students, part-time students, students from
low-income backgrounds, students of color, and first-generation
students, and building evidence for what works in postsecondary
education by testing the effectiveness of these strategies in improving
student persistence and completion outcomes. Similar to the
Department's Investing in Innovation Fund, which supports innovation
and evidence building in elementary and secondary education, a key
element of the FITW program is its multi-tier structure that links the
amount of funding that an applicant may receive to the quality of
evidence supporting the efficacy of the proposed project. Applicants
proposing practices supported by limited evidence can receive
relatively small grants (Development grants) that support the
development and initial evaluation of innovative but untested
strategies. Applicants proposing practices supported by evidence from
rigorous evaluations can receive larger grants (Validation and Scale-up
grants), in amounts commensurate to the level of supporting evidence,
for implementation at greater scale to test whether initially
successful strategies remain effective when adopted in varied locations
and with large and diverse groups of students. This structure provides
incentives for applicants to build evidence of effectiveness of their
proposed projects and to address the barriers to serving large numbers
of students within institutions and across systems, States, regions, or
the country. Additionally, the Department is exploring ways to
accelerate the progress of building evidence for effective strategies
that improve college completion through rapid scaling by allowing
larger awards in lower tiers for college and university systems and
consortia that collaborate with leading experts to test and rigorously
evaluate the most promising strategies at multiple sites.
All FITW projects are required to use part of their budgets to
conduct independent evaluations (as defined in this notice) of their
projects. This ensures that projects funded under the FITW program
contribute significantly to improving the information available to
practitioners and policymakers about which practices work, for which
types of students, and in what contexts.
Program Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1138-1138d.
Background: The proposed priorities, requirements, selection
criterion, and definitions for the FITW program set forth in this
notice would better enable the Department to achieve the purpose and
goals of the FITW program by creating mechanisms to direct funding to
priority areas of work that address the most important challenges in
postsecondary education and, additionally, set evidence and evaluation
requirements. There are currently no such program-specific priorities,
requirements, selection criteria, or definitions for the FITW program.
Proposed Priorities: This notice contains nine proposed priorities.
In any grant competition under this program, the Secretary may use,
individually or in combination, one or more of these priorities or
subparts of these priorities, priorities from the final supplemental
priorities and definitions for discretionary grant programs, published
in the Federal Register on December 10, 2014 (79 FR 73425), and
priorities based on the statutory requirements for the Fund for the
Improvement of Postsecondary Education (FIPSE).
Background: The proposed priorities correspond to what the
Department believes are the greatest current challenges in
postsecondary education and most important areas of work seeking to
address barriers to postsecondary student success. As provided under 34
CFR 75.105, these priorities may be used by the Department as absolute
or competitive preference priorities in grant competitions for the FITW
program in FY 2015 and later years to direct FITW funds to projects
that address these identified challenges and areas of work. In
addition, we may also use priorities from the Department's final
supplemental priorities and definitions
[[Page 9416]]
for discretionary grant programs, published in the Federal Register on
December 10, 2014 (79 FR 73425) (Supplemental Priorities), as absolute
or competitive preference priorities in the FITW program. Accordingly,
we are not proposing priorities in this notice that are already
included in the Supplemental Priorities.
Establishing program-specific priorities would provide the
Department the option to focus a particular year's FITW grant
competition on any or all (or none) of the policy areas set forth in
those priorities. For each year that new funds are available under the
FITW program, the Department would determine which, if any, of the
priorities to include in the grant competition.
The proposed priorities are organized so that the Department has
the flexibility to determine the area of focus for the priority. For
example, with respect to Proposed Priority 1--Improving Success in
Developmental Education, the Department could choose to include in a
notice inviting applications a competitive preference priority for any
type of project that seeks to improve outcomes in developmental
education by using the broadest language in the priority:
(Example) Competitive Preference Priority: Improving
Success in Developmental Education--Projects designed to improve
student success in developmental education or accelerate student
progress into credit bearing postsecondary courses.
Or, we could choose more specific language from the priority to
target a particular aspect of developmental education reform by
choosing to also include one of the subparts of Proposed Priority 1:
(Example) Competitive Preference Priority: Improving
Success in Developmental Education--Projects designed to improve
student success in developmental education or accelerate student
progress into credit bearing postsecondary courses through redesigning
developmental education courses or programs through strategies such as
contextualization of developmental coursework together with
occupational or college-content coursework.
We may also use priorities in combination with each other in a
notice inviting applications. For example, a competitive preference
priority for low cost, high impact strategies (Proposed Priority 6--
Implementing Low Cost-High Impact Strategies to Improve Student
Outcomes) that influence non-cognitive factors (Supplemental Priority
2-- Influencing the Development of Non-cognitive Factors) could be
included as follows:
(Example) Competitive Preference Priority: To meet this
competitive preference priority, an applicant must meet both sections
(A) and (B) of this priority.
(A) Implementing Low Cost-High Impact Strategies to Improve Student
Outcomes--Projects that use low cost tools or strategies, such as those
that use technology, that result in a high impact on student outcomes.
(B) Influencing the Development of Non-cognitive Factors--Projects
that are designed to improve students' mastery of non-cognitive skills
and behaviors (such as academic behaviors, academic mindset,
perseverance, self-regulation, social and emotional skills, and
approaches toward learning strategies) and enhance student motivation
and engagement in learning.
With respect to the proposed priorities, the Department is
particularly interested in brief comments responding to the following
questions:
Do the proposed priorities sufficiently address the
greatest challenges and barriers to postsecondary student success?
Do the subparts for each proposed priority adequately
capture the most promising aspects of the policy topic area of each
priority?
Proposed Priorities:
The Assistant Secretary proposes the following priorities for this
program. In any grant competition under this program, the Secretary may
use, individually or in combination, one or more of these priorities or
subparts of these priorities, priorities from the final supplemental
priorities and definitions for discretionary grant programs, published
in the Federal Register on December 10, 2014 (79 FR 73425), and
priorities based on the statutory requirements for the Fund for the
Improvement of Postsecondary Education (FIPSE).
Proposed Priority 1--Improving Success in Developmental Education.
Background: ``Developmental'' courses are instructional courses,
typically non-credit bearing, designed for students deficient in the
general competencies necessary for a regular postsecondary curriculum.
The most common developmental courses to which beginning students are
referred are math and reading/writing.\9\ It is estimated that almost
one-third of all students take some form of developmental course.\10\
While participation rates vary widely across States and institution
types, low-income, African-American, and Hispanic students are referred
to developmental courses at much higher rates.11 12 13
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ https://ccrc.tc.columbia.edu/media/k2/attachments/referral-enrollment-completion-developmental.pdf.
\10\ U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education
Statistics, 2011-12 National Postsecondary Student Aid Study
(NPSAS:12), Profile of Undergraduate Students 2011-12, Table 6.2.
Report available at: https://nces.ed.gov/pubs2015/2015167.pdf.
\11\ MDRC, Unlocking the Gate, June 2011. Article available at:
https://www.mdrc.org/sites/default/files/full_595.pdf.
\12\ Attewell, P. A., Lavin, D. E., Domina, T., & Levey, T.
2006. New Evidence on College Remediation. The Journal of Higher
Education. Article available at: https://www.jstor.org/stable/3838791.
\13\ https://ccrc.tc.columbia.edu/media/k2/attachments/referral-enrollment-completion-developmental.pdf.
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Developmental education is one of the leading barriers to
postsecondary persistence and completion.\14\ Discouraged by the
inability to enroll in courses that will allow them to earn credit and
advance in their programs of study, many students never even enroll in
the developmental courses to which they are referred.\15\ For those
students that do enroll in developmental courses, the majority do not
complete them, eventually dropping out of postsecondary education
altogether.16 17 Promising new practices in developmental
math education that have shown greater learning gains and success in
credit-bearing coursework by students indicate that the traditional
sequence, teaching, and content of developmental coursework has been
ineffective in supporting student mastery of the material.
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\14\ https://www.mdrc.org/sites/default/files/full_595.pdf.
\15\ Complete College America. 2012. Remediation: Higher
Education's Bridge to Nowhere. Report available at: https://www.completecollege.org/resources_and_reports/.
\16\ Complete College America. 2012. Remediation: Higher
Education's Bridge to Nowhere.
\17\ Bailey, T. 2009. Challenge and Opportunity: Rethinking the
Role and Function of Developmental Education in Community College.
In New Directions for Community Colleges. (Available Article
available at: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/cc.352/pdf.
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A number of institutions are making great effort to reform
traditional developmental education with promising results that would
benefit from more rigorous evaluation, in part to determine their
effectiveness on student performance, persistence, and completion, but
also to identify effective implementation strategies. Further, for the
interventions that have produced evidence of positive impacts on
student outcomes, almost none have been replicated and evaluated at
scale.
[[Page 9417]]
Proposed Priority 1--Improving Success in Developmental Education.
Proposed Priority: The Secretary gives priority to:
(a) Projects designed to improve student success in developmental
education or accelerate student progress into credit bearing
postsecondary courses; or,
(b) Projects designed to improve student success in developmental
education or accelerate student progress into credit bearing
postsecondary courses through one or more of the following:
(i) Identifying and treating academic needs prior to postsecondary
enrollment, including while in middle or high school, through
strategies such as partnerships between K-12 and postsecondary
institutions;
(ii) Diagnosing students' developmental education needs at the time
of or after postsecondary enrollment, such as by developing
alternatives to single measure placement strategies, and identifying
specific content gaps in order to customize instruction to an
individual student's needs;
(iii) Offering alternative pathways in mathematics, such as non-
Algebra based coursework for non-math and science fields.
(iv) Accelerating students' progress in completing developmental
education, through strategies such as modularized, fast-tracked, or
self-paced courses or placing students whose academic performance is
one or more levels below that required for credit-bearing courses into
credit-bearing courses with academic supports;
(v) Redesigning developmental education courses or programs through
strategies such as contextualization of developmental coursework
together with occupational or college-content coursework;
(vi) Integrating academic and other supports for students in
developmental education.
Proposed Priority 2--Improving Teaching and Learning.
Background: A large percentage of students in postsecondary
education struggle academically because they arrive to college
unprepared for college-level coursework.\18\ These struggles make the
prospect of dropping out more likely.\19\ Further, for students that do
complete, the limited available information on learning proficiency
suggests that too many students are lacking the critical thinking,
analytical, and communication skills needed for the modern
workforce.\20\ Some research indicates that as much as a third of
students show no high-order cognitive learning gains over the course of
their undergraduate educations.\21\
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\18\ Xianglei Chen and others, Academic Preparation for College
in the High School Senior Class of 2003-04: Education Longitudinal
Study of 2002 (ELS: 2002), Base-year, 2002, First Follow-up, 2004,
and High School Transcript Study, 2004 (Washington: U.S. Department
of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, January
2010); Jay Greene and Greg Foster, ``Public High School Graduation
and College Readiness Rates in the United States,'' Working Paper 3
(New York: Manhattan Institute, Center for Civic Information,
Education, September 2003). Greene and Foster define being minimally
``college ready'' as: graduating from high school, having taken four
years of English, three years of mathematics, and two years of
science, social science, and foreign language, and demonstrating
basic literacy skills by scoring at least 265 points on the National
Assessment of Educational Progress in reading.
\19\ Eric Bettinger and Bridget Terry Long, ``Addressing the
Needs of Under-Prepared College Students: Does College Remediation
Work?'' Journal of Human Resources 44, no. 3 (2009); Brian Jacob and
Lars Lefgren, ``Remedial Education and Student Achievement: A
Regression-Discontinuity Analysis,'' Review of Economics and
Statistics 86, no. 1 (2004): 226-44.
\20\ Arum, Richard and Roksa, Josipa, Academically Adrift:
Limited Learning on College Campuses (University of Chicago Press,
January 2011).
\21\ Richard Arum and Josipa Roksa, ``Are Undergraduates
Actually Learning Anything?'' Chronicle of Higher Education, January
18, 2011. Retrieved from: https://chronicle.com/article/Are-Undergraduates-Actually/125979/.
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These deficits are accompanied by a decline in productivity in
higher education. Controlling for inflation, the cost of attending
college has more than doubled over the past three decades.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ National Center for Education Statistics. ``Average
undergraduate tuition and fees and room and board rates charged for
full-time students in degree-granting institutions, by level and
control of institution: 1969-70 through 2011-12.'' Retrieved from:
https://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d12/tables/dt12_381.asp.
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Despite these challenges, which are felt more acutely by the types
of students that now make up the majority of students enrolled in
postsecondary education, adult learners, working students, part-time
students, students from low-income backgrounds, students of color, and
first-generation students, there has been little change in the methods
of teaching and instruction, as well as how students experience
learning in college. With some exceptions, the same degrees and other
credentials are offered in the same way, by counting up the amount of
hours students are taught. Methods of teaching have stayed largely
static. Given the poor outcomes many students are experiencing, new
approaches to teaching and learning, using new tools and strategies
that can help customize learning to accommodate diverse learning
styles, are needed at all levels of postsecondary education to improve
accessibility and quality and reduce cost.
Proposed Priority 2: Improving Teaching and Learning.
The Secretary gives priority to:
(a) Projects designed to improve teaching and learning; or,
(b) Projects designed to improve teaching and learning through one
or more of the following:
(i) Instruction-level tools or strategies such as adaptive learning
technology, educational games, personalized learning, active- or
project-based learning, faculty-centered strategies that systematically
improve the quality of teaching, or multi-disciplinary efforts focused
on improving instructional experiences;
(ii) Program-level strategies such as competency-based programs
that are designed with faculty, industry, employer, and expert
engagement, use rigorous methods to define competencies, and utilize
externally validated assessments, online or blended programs, or joint
offering of programs across institutions;
(iii) Institution-level tools or strategies such as faculty-
centered strategies to improve teaching across an institution, use of
open educational resources across, or tailoring academic content and
delivery to serve the needs of non-traditional students.
Proposed Priority 3--Improving Student Support Services.
Background: Almost all secondary schools and institutions of higher
education offer a diverse array of student support services to assist
with college preparation, application and enrollment, financial aid,
academic barriers and other issues related to access, persistence, and
completion. The range of services and support is extensive, and include
interventions both inside and outside the classroom and campus. Many of
these services are also provided by outside organizations, including
non-profits. Further, several of the Department's programs, including
TRIO, GEAR UP, and the Aid for Institutional Development programs,
provide funding for student and academic support services.
However, few student support services strategies have been
rigorously evaluated. Given the need to improve outcomes, particularly
for adult learners, working students, part-time students, students from
low-income backgrounds, students of color, and first-generation
students, new and innovative approaches are needed, including those
that are cost effective, so that a greater number of students can be
served.
[[Page 9418]]
Proposed Priority 3: Improving Student Support Services.
The Secretary gives priority to:
(a) Projects designed to improve the supports or services provided
to students prior to or during the students' enrollment in
postsecondary education; or,
(b) Projects designed to improve the supports or services provided
to students prior to or during the students' enrollment in
postsecondary education through one or more of the following:
(i) Integrating student support services, including with academic
advising and instruction;
(ii) Individualizing or personalizing support services such as
advising, coaching, tutoring, or mentoring to students and their
identified needs using tools or strategies such as predictive analytics
to identify students who may need specific supports, or behavioral
interventions used to provide timely, relevant, and actionable
information for students at critical points such as when they may be at
risk of dropping out;
(iii) Connecting students to resources or services other than those
typically provided by postsecondary institutions, such as providing
assistance in accessing government benefits, transportation assistance,
medical, health, or nutritional resources and services, child care,
housing, or legal services;
(iv) Utilizing technology such as digital messaging to provide
supports or services systematically.
Proposed Priority 4--Developing and Using Assessments of Learning.
Background: Learning assessment has shown promise as an effective
instructional strategy to increase student success. While learning
assessment, in the past, focused more on traditional testing, current
assessment has expanded to assess not just what students know but also
what they can do. Further, a knowledge-based economy requires
assessment of higher-order thinking skills such as recall, analysis,
comparison, inference, application, and evaluation. New forms of
assessments must be developed for these purposes. Assessments are also
needed to measure what is learned outside the classroom, such as
through previous work experience.
Proposed Priority 4: Developing and Using Assessments of Learning.
The Secretary gives priority to:
(a) Projects that support the development and use of externally
validated assessments of student learning and stated learning goals;
or,
(b) Projects that support the development and use of externally
validated assessments of student learning and stated learning goals
through one or more of the following:
(i) Alternative assessment tools or strategies such as micro- or
competency-based assessments, assessments embedded in curriculum, or
simulations, games, or other technology-based assessment approaches;
(ii) Professional development or training of faculty on the
approaches to developing, using, and interpreting assessments;
(iii) Combining or sequencing assessments from multiple sources to
strengthen diagnostic capabilities;
(iv) Aligning assessments across sectors and institutions, such as
across kindergarten through grade 12 and postsecondary education
systems or across 2-year and 4-year institutions, to improve college-
readiness and content delivery;
(v) Open-source assessments.
Proposed Priority 5--Facilitating Pathways to Credentialing and
Transfer.
Background: Students obtain knowledge and skills through a variety
of experiences and from a range of institutions and providers. Many
postsecondary students attend more than one institution on their way to
earning a certificate or degree. Although increasing numbers of States
and educational institutions are entering into articulation agreements
to facilitate credit transfer, too many students continue to lose time
and incur additional expense due to lost credits when transferring
between institutions. Further, many student learning experiences, such
as learning that occurs through work experience or from non-traditional
education providers, are simply not recognized.
Alternate systems and methods of assessing, aggregating, and
credentialing learning experiences are needed to help more students
reach completion in accelerated timeframes. Additionally, new systems
of portable, stackable postsecondary degrees and credentials along
transparent career pathways must be designed and opportunities to
obtain such degrees and credential must be expanded.
Proposed Priority 5: Facilitating Pathways to Credentialing and
Transfer. The Secretary gives priority to:
(a) Projects designed to develop and implement systems and
practices to capture and aggregate credit or other evidence of
knowledge and skills towards postsecondary degrees or credentials; or,
(b) Projects designed to develop and implement systems and
practices to capture and aggregate credit or other evidence of
knowledge and skills towards postsecondary degrees or credentials
through one or more of the following:
(i) Seamless transfer of credits between postsecondary
institutions;
(ii) Validation and transfer of credit for learning or learning
experiences from non-institutional sources;
(iii) Alternate credentialing or badging frameworks;
(iv) Opportunities for students to earn college credits prior to
postsecondary enrollment, such as through dual enrollment, dual degree,
dual admission, or early college programs.
Proposed Priority 6--Increasing the Effectiveness of Financial Aid.
Background: The federal government, States, and institutions make a
wide range of financial aid in the form of grants, loans, and tax
credits available to students pursuing postsecondary education.
Evidence shows that lowering the costs of college, the result of
student aid, can improve access and completion.\23\ Indeed, since the
adoption of the Higher Education Act almost 50 years ago, average aid
per student has more than tripled, from $3,347 in 1971-72 to $12,455 in
2010-11 (in constant 2010 dollars), while full-time equivalent
enrollment has more than doubled, from about 6.2 million in 1971-72 to
14.2 million in 2010-11.\24\
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\23\ Dynarski, S.(2003). Does Aid Matter? Measuring the Effects
of Student Aid on College Attendance and Completion. American
Economic Review.
\24\ Dynarski, S., & Scott-Clayton, J. (2013). Financial aid
policy: Lessons from Research. The Future of Children. Postsecondary
Education in the United States. Vol 23. No. 1.
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But, this conclusion is not without exception. Due to the numerous
types of aid that are available, the range of sources, and the detailed
application process, the financial aid system is complex. This
complexity may have the unintended effect of creating barriers to
access, one of the very problems that financial aid is designed to
address. Further, some types of aid may have a greater impact on
outcomes than others, achievement incentives may help improve
persistence and completion, and in the case of loans, levels of debt
may influence student decisions. In general, the effectiveness of
financial aid is impacted by a number of factors including the design
and delivery of aid programs, the level of understanding by students
and families of costs and availability of aid, and the ability of
students and families to navigate the application process and make
optimal decisions. New and innovative strategies and tools that address
these realities to maximize the effectiveness of financial aid are
needed.
[[Page 9419]]
Proposed Priority 6: Increasing the Effectiveness of Financial Aid.
The Secretary gives priority to:
(a) Projects designed to improve the effectiveness of financial
aid.
(b) Projects designed to improve the effectiveness of financial aid
through one or more of the following:
(i) Counseling, advising, creation of information and resources,
and other support activities on higher education financing and
financial literacy delivered by financial aid offices or integrated
with other support services provided by institutions, including on
student loan repayment options such as income driven repayment plans
and public service loan forgiveness and debt management;
(ii) Personalized approaches to financial aid delivery, counseling,
advising, and other support activities which may include early warning
systems, use of predictive analytics, need based aid, emergency aid, or
bonuses or other incentives for successful outcomes such as on-time
academic progress and completion.
Note: As with any project supported by the FITW program,
grantees may not disburse project funds under this priority to
students for the purpose of providing student aid. FITW funds may be
used to pay project costs such as costs for the design,
administration, and evaluation of aid programs or financial aid
strategies.
Proposed Priority 7--Implementing Low Cost-High Impact Strategies
To Improve Student Outcomes.
Background: Given the limited resources of secondary schools,
institutions of higher education, and other relevant stakeholders, the
cost effectiveness of any intervention designed to improve student
outcomes is of primary importance. In recent years, numerous
institutions, researchers, and others have begun testing interventions
that are relatively low cost but have the ability to have a high impact
on student outcomes. Many of these interventions minimize cost through
the use of technology, such as digital messaging. Others incorporate
low cost approaches, such as non-cognitive interventions. We are
particularly interested in effective low cost interventions because
even institutions with limited resources would be able to scale such
strategies to impact large numbers of students, and, such
interventions, particularly those that use technology, are often easily
replicable. This proposed priority could be used in combination with
other priorities.
Proposed Priority 7: Implementing Low Cost-High Impact Strategies
To Improve Student Outcomes. The Secretary gives priority to projects
that use low cost tools or strategies, such as those that use
technology, that result in a high impact on student outcomes.
Proposed Priority 8--Improving Postsecondary Student Outcomes at
Minority-Serving Institutions.
Background: Minority-serving institutions (MSIs) (as defined in
this notice), including Historically Black Colleges and Universities
(HBCUs), enroll a significant and disproportionate share of students
from low-income backgrounds, students of color, and first-generation
students. As the goal of the FITW program is to identify strategies
that work in improving the postsecondary outcomes of these students,
and because, in some cases, MSIs face unique challenges, it is
important that the FITW program supports projects at MSIs. Accordingly,
the Department proposes this priority to prioritize projects at MSIs.
This proposed priority could be used as an absolute priority to set
aside a specific amount of funds to support projects at MSIs, or to
give competitive preference points to applicants that are MSIs. The
lead applicant under this proposed priority must be an MSI.
Proposed Priority 8: Improving Postsecondary Student Outcomes at
Minority-Serving Institutions. The Secretary gives priority to projects
designed to improve student outcomes at Minority-Serving Institutions
(as defined in this notice).
Proposed Priority 9--Systems and Consortia Focused on Large-Scale
Impact.
Background: The Department is including this proposed priority to
encourage the formation of college consortia and systems that can
collaborate with leading experts to implement promising strategies that
address key barriers to completion. This would allow applicants to
increase the number of students participating in or impacted by a
project and would allow for development, testing, and robust evaluation
of projects at multiple sites whose results could be more rapidly
generalized and applied to other institutions. While Validation and
Scale-up projects would be designed to serve relatively larger numbers
of students across multiple institutions, Development projects may be
more limited in scope so long as they have the sample size necessary to
meet the proposed requirements for evaluation design described below.
Encouraging greater collaboration with other institutions and partners
would enable postsecondary institutions and systems to expand the
number of students served by a project, more rapidly improve the
quality and applicability of the evidence produced from the required
evaluations, and encourage efforts in the field to work across networks
to share emergent effective practices across the higher education
enterprise.
Proposed Priority 9: Systems and Consortia Focused on Large-Scale
Impact. The Secretary gives priority to projects that involve consortia
of institutions, including across a college or university system, and
partnerships with leading experts that are implemented at multiple
sites with large sample sizes to allow for more rapid development,
evaluation, and scaling of practices determined to be effective.
Types of Priorities:
When inviting applications for a competition using one or more
priorities, we designate the type of each priority as absolute,
competitive preference, or invitational through a notice in the Federal
Register. The effect of each type of priority follows:
Absolute priority: Under an absolute priority, we consider only
applications that meet the priority (34 CFR 75.105(c)(3)).
Competitive preference priority: Under a competitive preference
priority, we give competitive preference to an application by (1)
awarding additional points, depending on the extent to which the
application meets the priority (34 CFR 75.105(c)(2)(i)); or (2)
selecting an application that meets the priority over an application of
comparable merit that does not meet the priority (34 CFR
75.105(c)(2)(ii)).
Invitational priority: Under an invitational priority, we are
particularly interested in applications that meet the priority.
However, we do not give an application that meets the priority a
preference over other applications (34 CFR 75.105(c)(1)).
Proposed Requirements, Selection Criterion, and Definitions:
This notice contains eight proposed requirements, one proposed
selection criterion, and three proposed definitions.
Background: The proposed requirements, selection criterion, and
definitions would allow the Department to set the eligibility,
evidence, and evaluation expectations for grant recipients under the
FITW program. We may also use requirements, selection criteria, or
definitions from 34 CFR parts 75 and 77 and other sections of the
Education Department General Administrative Regulations (EDGAR).
Accordingly, we are not proposing requirements, selection criteria, and
definitions in this notice that are already included in EDGAR.
[[Page 9420]]
The Department may award three types of grants under this program:
``Development'' grants, ``Validation'' grants, and ``Scale-up'' grants.
These grants differ in terms of the level of prior evidence of
effectiveness required for consideration of funding, the level of scale
the funded project should reach, and, consequently, the amount of
funding available to support the project. We provide an overview to
clarify our expectations for each grant type:
(1) Development grants provide funding to support the development
or testing of processes, products, strategies, or practices that are
supported by relatively less evidence, likely strong theory (as defined
in 34 CFR 77.1(c)) or evidence of promise (as defined in 34 CFR
77.1(c)), and whose efficacy should be systematically studied.
Development grants would support new or substantially more effective
practices for addressing widely shared challenges. Development projects
are novel and significant nationally, not projects that simply
implement existing practices in additional locations or support needs
that are primarily local in nature.
All Development grantees must evaluate the effectiveness of the
project at the level of scale required in the notice inviting
applications under which they applied.
(2) Validation grants provide funding to expand projects supported
by greater evidence than would be required for a development grant,
likely moderate evidence of effectiveness (as defined in 34 CFR
77.1(c)), to multiple sites such as multiple institutions. Validation
grants must further assess the effectiveness of the FITW-supported
practice through a rigorous evaluation, with particular focus on the
populations for and the contexts in which the practice is most
effective. We expect and consider it appropriate that each applicant
would propose to use the Validation funding to build its capacity to
deliver the FITW-supported practice, particularly early in the funding
period, to successfully reach the level of scale proposed in its
application. Additionally, we expect each applicant to address any
specific barriers to the growth or scaling of the organization or
practice (including barriers related to cost-effectiveness) in order to
deliver the FITW-supported practice at the proposed level of scale and
provide strategies to address these barriers as part of its proposed
scaling plan.
All Validation grantees must evaluate the effectiveness of the
practice that the supported project implements and expands. We expect
that these evaluations would be conducted in a variety of contexts and
for a variety of students, would identify the core elements of the
practice, and would codify the practices to support adoption or
replication by the applicant and other entities.
(3) Scale-up grants provide funding to expand projects supported by
greater evidence than would be required for Development or Validation
grants, likely strong evidence of effectiveness (as defined in 34 CFR
77.1(c)), and to a larger number of sites than would be required for a
Development or Validation grant, such as across a system of
institutions, across institutions in a State, a region, or nationally,
or across institutions in a labor market sector. In addition to
improving outcomes for an increasing number of high-need students,
Scale-up grants will generate information about the students and
contexts for which a practice is most effective. We expect that Scale-
up grants would increase practitioners' and policymakers' understanding
of strategies that allow organizations or practices to expand quickly
and efficiently while maintaining their effectiveness.
Similar to Validation grants, all Scale-up grantees must evaluate
the effectiveness of the FITW-supported practice that the project
implements and expands; this is particularly important in instances in
which the proposed project includes changing the FITW-supported
practice in order to more efficiently reach the proposed level of scale
(for example, by developing technology-enabled training tools). The
evaluation of a Scale-up grant must identify the core elements of, and
codify, the FITW-supported practice that the project implements to
support adoption or replication by other entities. We also expect that
evaluations of Scale-up grants would be conducted in a variety of
contexts and for a variety of students in order to determine the
context(s) and population(s) for which the FITW-supported practice is
most effective.
With respect to the proposed requirements, selection criterion, and
definitions, the Department is particularly interested in brief
comments responding to the following questions:
Are there a sufficient number of postsecondary strategies
or interventions addressing important challenges in postsecondary
education that are supported by moderate evidence of effectiveness (as
defined in 34 CFR 77.1(c)), the likely evidence standard requirement
that would be assigned by the Department to a competition for
Validation grants, to warrant making Validation grants available in the
FY 2015 FITW grant competition? The Department encourages commenters
responding to this question to provide citations or links to any
studies they believe would meet the moderate evidence of effectiveness
standard.
Are there a sufficient number of postsecondary strategies
or interventions addressing important challenges in postsecondary
education that are supported by strong evidence of effectiveness (as
defined in 34 CFR 77.1(c)), the likely evidence standard requirement
that would be assigned by the Department to a competition for Scale-up
grants, to warrant making Scale-up grants available in the FY 2015 FITW
grant competition? The Department encourages commenters responding to
this question to provide citations or links to any studies they believe
would meet the strong evidence of effectiveness standard.
Which of the proposed priorities should be included as
absolute or competitive preference priorities in the FY 2015 FITW
program grant competition?
Proposed Requirements:
The Assistant Secretary proposes the following requirements for
this program. We may apply one or more of these requirements in any
year in which this program is in effect.
1. Innovations that Improve Outcomes for High-Need Students: The
Secretary may require that--
(a) Grantees must implement projects designed to improve outcomes
of high-need students (as defined in this notice) in postsecondary
education; or,
(b) Grantees must implement projects designed to improve one or
more of the following outcomes of high-need students (as defined in
this notice) in postsecondary education:
(i) Persistence;
(ii) Academic progress;
(iii) Time to degree; or,
(iv) Completion.
2. Eligibility: The Secretary may make grants to, or enter into
contracts with, one or more of the following:
(a) A public or private non-profit institution of higher
education, a public or private non-profit institution, or
combinations of such institutions; or,
(b) A public or private non-profit agency.
The Secretary will announce the eligible applicants in the NIA.
Note: Section 741 of the HEA provides that, under the FIPSE,
the Secretary is authorized to make grants to, or enter into
contracts with, institutions of higher education, combinations of
such institutions, and other public and private nonprofit
institutions and agencies. The requirement for eligibility simply
restates these statutory
[[Page 9421]]
provisions. In any grant competition under this program, the
Department could choose to allow applications from one or more of
the eligible entities, including public or private non-profit
educational institutions that are not institutions of higher
education as defined under the HEA and public agencies or third
party non-profit organizations or entities.
3. Types of FITW grants: Awards may be made for Development grants,
Validation grants, and Scale-up grants. The Secretary will announce the
type of grants that applicants may apply for in the NIA.
4. Evidence and Sample Size Standards: To be eligible for an
award--
(a) An application for a Development grant must be supported by one
of the following:
(i) Evidence of promise (as defined in 34 CFR 77.1(c));
(ii) Strong theory (as defined in 34 CFR 77.1(c)); or
(iii) Evidence of promise or strong theory.
The Secretary will announce in the notice inviting applications
which evidence standard will apply to a Development grant in a given
competition. Under (a)(iii), applicants must identify whether their
application is supported by evidence of promise or strong theory.
(b) An application for a Validation grant must be supported by
moderate evidence of effectiveness (as defined in 34 CFR 77.1(c)).
(c) An application for a Scale-up grant must be supported by strong
evidence of effectiveness (as defined in 34 CFR 77.1(c)).
(d) The Secretary may require that an application for a Development
grant, Validation grant, or Scale-up grant must be supported by one or
more of the following levels of sample size:
(i) Large sample (as defined in 34 CFR 77.1(c));
(ii) Multi-site sample (as defined in 34 CFR 77.1(c)), such as at
multiple institutions; or
(iii) Scaled multi-site sample, such as across a system of
institutions, across institutions in a State, a region, or nationally,
or across institutions in a labor market sector.
The Secretary will announce in the NIA which sample size standards
will apply to each type of FITW grant (Development, Validation, or
Scale-up) that is available.
(e) Where evidence of promise, moderate evidence of effectiveness,
or strong evidence of effectiveness is required to receive a grant, an
applicant's project must propose to implement the core aspects of the
process, product, strategy, or practice from their supporting study as
closely as possible. Where modifications to a cited process, product,
strategy, or practice will be made to account for student or
institutional characteristics, resource limitations, or other special
factors or to address deficiencies identified by the cited study, the
applicant must provide a justification or basis for the modifications.
Modifications may not be proposed to the core aspects of any cited
process, product, strategy, or practice.
5. Evaluation:
(a) The grantee must conduct an Independent Evaluation (as defined
in this notice) of its project. The evaluation must estimate the impact
of the FITW-supported practice (as implemented at the proposed level of
scale) on a relevant outcome (as defined in 34 CFR 77.1(c)).
(b) The evaluation design for a Development grant, Validation
grant, or Scale-up grant must meet one or either of the following
standards:
(i) What Works Clearing Standards without reservations (as defined
in 34 CFR 77.1(c)); or
(ii) What Works Clearinghouse Standards with reservations (as
defined in 34 CFR 77.1(c)).
The Secretary will announce in the NIA the evaluation standard(s)
that will apply to each type of FITW grant (Development, Validation, or
Scale-up) that is available.
(c) The grantee must make broadly available digitally and free of
charge, through formal (e.g., peer-reviewed journals) or informal
(e.g., newsletters) mechanisms, the results of any evaluations it
conducts of its funded activities. The grantee must also ensure that
the data from its evaluation are made available to third-party
researchers consistent with applicable privacy requirements.
(d) The grantee and its independent evaluator must agree to
cooperate on an ongoing basis with any technical assistance provided by
the Department or its contractor, including any technical assistance
provided to ensure that the evaluation design meets the required
evaluation standards, and comply with the requirements of any
evaluation of the program conducted by the Department. This includes
providing to the Department, within 100 days of a grant award, an
updated comprehensive evaluation plan in a format and using such tools
as the Department may require. Grantees must update this evaluation
plan at least annually to reflect any changes to the evaluation and
provide the updated evaluation plan to the Department. All of these
updates must be consistent with the scope and objectives of the
approved application.
6. Funding Categories: An applicant will be considered for an award
only for the type of FITW grant (Development, Validation, and Scale-up)
for which it applies. An applicant may not submit an application for
the same proposed project under more than one type of grant.
7. Limit on Grant Awards: The Secretary may choose to deny the
award of a grant to an applicant if the applicant already holds an
active FITW grant from a previous FITW competition or, if awarded,
would result in the applicant receiving more than one FITW grant in the
same year.
8. Management Plan: Within 100 days of a grant award, the grantee
must provide an updated comprehensive management plan for the approved
project in a format and using such tools as the Department may require.
This management plan must include detailed information about
implementation of the first year of the grant, including key
milestones, staffing details, and other information that the Department
may require. It must also include a complete list of performance
metrics, including baseline measures and annual targets. The grantee
must update this management plan at least annually to reflect
implementation of subsequent years of the project and provide the
updated management plan to the Department.
Proposed Selection Criterion:
The Assistant Secretary proposes the following selection criterion
for evaluating an application under this program. We may apply this
criterion or any of the selection criteria from 34 CFR part 75 in any
year in which this program is in effect. In the notice inviting
applications, the application package, or both, we will announce the
maximum points assigned to each selection criteria.
1. Collaborations: The extent to which the proposed project is
designed to engage individuals or entities with expertise, experience,
and knowledge regarding the project's activities, such as postsecondary
institutions, non-profit organizations, experts, academics, and
practitioners.
Note: This proposed selection criterion--Collaborations--would
assess the extent to which applicants collaborate with knowledgeable
or experienced parties in designing and implementing their projects.
It is intended to encourage such collaboration in order to increase
the quality of an application and project. The purpose of the
Collaborations selection criterion is distinct from the purpose of
Proposed Priority 8--Implementing Partnerships Focused on
[[Page 9422]]
Large-scale Impact, which focuses on increasing impact. The proposed
selection criterion for Collaborations would not assess scope of
impact. Rather, it would determine whether an applicant has engaged
relevant third party experts in designing the project.
Proposed Definitions:
The Assistant Secretary proposes the following definitions for this
program. We may apply one or more of these definitions in any year in
which this program is in effect.
1. High-need student means a student at risk of education failure
or otherwise in need of special assistance and support such as adult
learners, working students, part-time students, students from low-
income backgrounds, students of color, first-generation students, and
students who are English learners.
2. Independent evaluation means an evaluation that is designed and
carried out independent of and external to the grantee, but in
coordination with, any employees of the grantee who develop a process,
product, strategy, or practice and are implementing it.
3. Minority-serving institution means an institution that is
eligible to receive assistance under sections 316 through 320 of part A
of Title III, under part B of Title III, or under Title V of the HEA.
Final Priorities, Requirements, Selection Criterion, and
Definitions:
We will announce the final priorities, requirements, selection
criterion, and definitions in a notice in the Federal Register. We will
determine the final priorities, requirements, selection criterion, and
definitions after considering responses to this notice and other
information available to the Department. This notice does not preclude
us from proposing additional priorities, requirements, definitions, or
selection criteria, subject to meeting applicable rulemaking
requirements.
Note: This notice does not solicit applications. In any year in
which we choose to use one or more of these priorities,
requirements, selection criterion, and definitions, we invite
applications through a notice 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 is not a significant regulatory
action subject to review by OMB under section 3(f) of Executive Order
12866.
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 on 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 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 priorities, requirements, selection
criterion, and definitions only upon 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 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 are those
resulting from statutory requirements and those we have determined as
necessary for administering the Department's programs and activities.
Intergovernmental Review: This program is subject to Executive
Order 12372 and the regulations in 34 CFR part 79. One of the
objectives of the Executive order is to foster an intergovernmental
partnership and a strengthened federalism. The Executive order relies
on processes developed by State and local governments for coordination
and review of proposed Federal financial assistance.
This document provides early notification of our specific plans and
actions for this program.
Accessible Format: Individuals with disabilities can obtain this
document in an accessible format (e.g., braille, large print,
audiotape, or compact disc) on request to the program contact 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
[[Page 9423]]
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.
Dated: February 13, 2015.
Ted Mitchell,
Under Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2015-03502 Filed 2-20-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000-01-P