Transcript Slide 1

Title II, Part A Training for New LEA Coordinators

Title II-A Regional Meetings August-September 2012

Purpose of Title II, Part A

To help school districts ensure that all students have

effective teachers

who have the

subject matter knowledge

and the

teaching skills

to help all of their students achieve at high academic standards, regardless of individual learning styles or needs.

Title II, Part A Focus:

Teacher Effectiveness

•Recruit, train, and retain

highly qualified

teachers, paraprofessionals, and principals •Provide high quality professional learning opportunities

Title II, Part A Focus:

Equity

•Ensure that poor and minority children are not taught by inexperienced, unqualified, or mis-assigned teachers at higher rates than other children •Ensure that children in low performing schools in all geographic regions of the state have access to experienced, qualified, effective, and appropriately assigned teachers on an equitable basis

LEA Needs Assessment and Planning

The purpose of the LEA annual needs assessment is to determine the needs of the school system in order to maintain an up-to-date action plan of improvement. The system must assure that information is gathered concerning the needs of its teaching force in order to be able to have all students meet challenging State content and academic achievement standards.

An effective needs assessment process is critical to the successful implementation of the Title II, Part A program.

LEA Needs Assessment and Planning

The system annually completes a Needs Assessment that addresses each of the following: a) Recruitment b) Retention c) Professional learning and training for teachers, paraprofessionals, and school and system leaders, including meeting diverse student needs d) Class size reduction, if funding e) Non-HiQ teachers and paraprofessionals f) Equitable opportunities for all students, including poor and minority) in the areas of: 1) Teacher quality 2) Teacher experience 3) Class size

Data Collection and Analysis

(AKA - Needs Assessment)

Student Learning Demographic Student & Teacher

Perception

Process

Needs Assessment and Planning The needs assessment and planning processes are done in collaboration with principals, teachers (including those teaching students with varied needs), paraprofessionals, other relevant school personnel, community / business members, higher educational units , and parents.

Guidance and Tools for Completing a Needs Assessment

• Section VI of the Title II Part A Handbook (Needs Assessment and Planning) • Needs Assessment Worksheet (Section VI) • http://www.gapsc.com/EducatorPreparation/NoChildLeft Behind/home.html

Equity Plans for FY13

Title II, Part A of ESEA requires that all students, including poor and minority, have equitable opportunities with respect to quality instruction, teachers’ instructional experience, class size, and teachers’ ability to meet the diverse learning needs of all students.

 The needs assessment drives the development of the Equity Plan.

 Address all equity indicators (as seen on the next slide) and determine the rating for each indicator for your system (the LEA must select at least one equity indicator to move from “Adequate” or below to “Target” on Georgia’s Equity Rubric).

LEA Self-Review of System Equity Plan: Poor and Minority Student Equity Rubric Indicators Annual Needs Assessment Including Required Equity Components Equity of Stakeholder Involvement Highly Qualified Teacher Equity Teacher Experience and Effectiveness Equity C lass Size Equity Teacher Preparation and Ability to Meet Diverse Needs of Students Retention of Highly Qualified, Effective Teachers Recruitment and Placement of Highly Qualified, Effective Teachers

XI. Equity Indicator Selected for FY13 Focus

I. Equity Indicator Selected for FY13 Focus FY13 Equity Indicator(s) Selected for Focus: 1) ________________________

Include a statement of school/system equity needs (including identifying at least one equity indicator that will be a focus for movement to

” Target”

). Note: If the Highly Qualified Teacher equity indicator is selected, an additional indicator must also be selected for focus.

2) ________________________ Note: Include in the System Implementation Plan (SIP)

the action plan for the above equity indicator(s) containing:  Actions/Strategies/ Interventions or Programs  Correlation to School Keys  Professional Learning (Include funding source and cost.)  Resources or Materials Needed (Include funding source and cost.)  Person or Position Responsible for Monitoring and Evaluation  Timeline For Implementation 

Means of Evaluation (What will be used to evaluate the action, strategy, intervention, or program?)

Monitoring of Intervention (Artifacts)

Monitoring of Impact (Student Learning Data)

Consolidated Application

Updated Information in Appropriate Descriptors Expedites CLIP Approval Process Allows Timely Budget Submission Specific information required by the Title II-A program must be included in Descriptors 1, 15, 18, 19, and 21

Most of the information requested in

Descriptors 1, 15, and 18

for the Title II, Part A portion of the FY13 ConApp should have been included in your approved FY13 Equity Plan. Cut and paste required information from your

approved

FY13 Equity Plan to your FY13 ConApp.

Deadline for submitting the Consolidated Application - July 31

Guidance for Completing the Title II, Part A Requirements in the Consolidated Application

• Title II, Part A Guidance for Completing the FY13 Consolidated Application CLIP- emailed to you by your Title II, Part A Education Specialist • FY13 CLIP Review Guidelines for Title II, Part A emailed to you by your Title II, Part A Education Specialist • Your Title II, Part A Education Specialist

Planning an Effective Title II, Part A Budget Conduct Annual Needs Assessment Identify and Prioritize System Needs Design Strategies to Address Needs Expend Funds as Budgeted Allocate Funds to Implement Strategies (Budget) Design System for Evaluating Effectiveness of Strategies

Planning an Effective Title II, Part A Budget Conduct Annual Needs Assessment Expend Funds as Budgeted Identify and Prioritize System Needs

Title II-A Funded Strategies

Allocate Funds to Implement Strategies (Budget) Design Strategies to Address Needs Design System for Evaluating Effectiveness of Strategies

Steps to Ensure Effective Use of Funds

1) The effective implementation of the Title II-A program in a Local Education Agency (LEA) is a process that begins with an annual needs assessment through which the LEA determines its status in achieving the Title II-A goals. 2) The LEA must prioritize the needs that have been identified through the needs assessment process. 3) To address its needs, the LEA is allowed the flexibility to design and develop a number of different activities or strategies that address one or more of its annual prioritized needs that will best assist the LEA in achieving Title II-A goals.

Steps to Ensure Effective Use of Funds

4) The LEA must budget its allocated Title II-A funds to implement the strategies and/or activities that are designed to address one or more of its annual identified, prioritized needs. 5) The LEA must expend its Title II-A funds as budgeted.

6) The LEA must evaluate and document the effectiveness of the activities and/or strategies funded by Title II-A toward addressing its annual prioritized need(s) and making progress in reaching the goals of Title II-A.

Required Use of Funds Non-highly qualified teachers or paraprofessionals in meeting the requirements to become highly qualified Implementation of the Equity Action Plan to move at least one equity indicator rated as “Adequate” or below on Georgia’s Equity Rubric to “Target” Professional learning needs of teachers and school administrators at each school identified as Priority, Focus or Alert unless the LEA can document the professional learning needs for one or more of these schools are adequately funded through other sources

One More LEA Set Aside

Section 9501 of the ESEA requires the LEA to set aside Title II, Part A funds for

professional development for private school teachers and other appropriate staff

at an amount equal to that set aside for public school teachers and staff on a per ‐ pupil basis taking into account the number and educational needs of the children to be served.

Authorized Use of Funds

Professional Development Recruitment of HQ Teachers Retention of HQ Teachers Class Size Reduction

Considerations for Use of Funds

• Title II-A funds must be used to

supplement, and not supplant, non-Federal funds that

would otherwise be used for activities authorized under Title II-A • It is presumed supplanting has occurred in the following circumstances: • LEA uses Title II-A funds to provide services that were required under other federal, state, or local laws • LEA uses Title II-A funds to provide services that were provided with non-Title II-A funds in the previous year

Considerations for Use of Funds

 Expenditures of Title II-A funds must be • • •

necessary

to implement a strategy/activity, • designed to meet one or more of the annual prioritized needs,

reasonable allowable

in cost, and to the Title II-A program.

• Consolidate with other fund sources to address prioritized needs

REMINDERS for FY12: Budget and Anticipated Expenditures

• LEAs must expend at least 85% of the Title IIA allocation in the fiscal year funds are made available (i.e., 85% of FY12 allocation must be expended by Sept 30) •

Any carryover and additional funds in the fiscal year budget must also be expended in that fiscal year

Calculate Allowable Carryover

FY12 Allocation $435,000 LEA Must Expend from Jul 1, 2011-Sep 30, 2012 At Least 85% All $369,750 At a minimum 50,000 Carryover Funds Additional Allocation 50,000 72,000 All 72,000 Total Grant Funds $557,000 carryover + additional funds + 85% of FY12 Allocation $491, 750 Allowable carryover to FY13: 15% of $435,000 = $65,250

Guidance for Budget Planning

• Section VIII of the Title II, Part A Handbook • FY13 Budget Review Checklist Due date for submission of FY13 budgets - October 1

Highly Qualified Who must be Highly Qualified (HiQ)?

What are the Title II-A requirements related to HiQ?

How do you know if a teacher or paraprofessional is HiQ?

What resources are available to support HIQ?

Who Must Be Highly Qualified?

All

Teachers who teach core academic subjects and are the teacher of record • Paraprofessionals with instructional duties

What Are Core Academic Subjects?

Elementary (P-5) – – Reading – Language Arts, – Mathematics – Broad-field Science – Broad-field Social Science – Foreign language – Visual Arts – Music – Band – Chorus Middle Grades (4-8) – Same as Elementary

What Are Core Academic Subjects?

High School (6-12) – – English – Reading – Mathematics – Broad-field Science (ex: Physics, Biology, Chemistry, Earth Space Science..) – History – Political Science – Geography – Economics – Foreign Language – Visual arts – Music – Band – Chorus

How do you know who is HIQ?

• What is the teaching assignment for each segment of the day? • What fields are indicated on the certificate?

• Do these match?

Note: Charter school teachers and paraprofessionals must still meet the HiQ requirements even if certification is not required.

Teaching Assignments and HiQ

• •

Art and Music Teachers (6.23)

working in a departmentalized model must have appropriate certification to be “HiQ” to teach art or music

Reading Teachers (6.15)

– Who hold ECE, P-5 certification are HiQ to teach reading in grades P-5 – Who hold MG, 4-8 Reading Concentration are HiQ to teach reading in grades 4-8 – Who hold Reading Endorsement are HiQ to teach reading at the grade levels of their base certificate – Who hold the P-12 Reading certificate are HiQ to teach reading at all grade levels P-12

Teaching Assignments and HiQ

• • •

Teachers in Early Intervention Programs (6.11)

requirements to be “highly qualified.” (EIP) who are teachers of record for any academic content must meet

Teachers in Pre-K Programs (6.09)

requirements.

, including preschool special education programs are not required to meet HiQ

Teachers in Hospital/Homebound Programs (6.08)

– Not required to meet HiQ requirements if students are not absent from school 20 or more consecutive school days – If student absent from school 20 or more consecutive school days, a “highly qualified” teacher must be identified for core academic subjects as teacher of record and must supervise content instruct through a collaborative model.

Teaching Assignments and HiQ

• •

English to Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL) Teachers (6.23)

– Who teach core academic content subjects must meet HiQ requirements for each content area.

• English ESOL I, II, III, and IV are English content courses – Who hold ESOL (P-12) are in-field to teach any ESOL course in P 12 (course prefix “55”).

– Who hold ESOL endorsement are in-field to teach any ESOL course (course prefix “55”) at the grade levels of their base certificate.

Teachers of Gifted Students (6.21)

– Who hold the gifted in-field endorsement are HiQ in the teacher’s base field of certification only.

– Who hold the gifted K-12 certification must be “highly qualified” to teach assigned content.

Teaching Assignments and HiQ

Teachers in after-school, intersession, and evening-school (3.02)

must meet HiQ requirements.

Connections teachers (6.22)

who teach core academic content subjects must meet HiQ requirements

Teaching Assignments and HiQ

Teachers who teach in SAT preparation programs (6.12)

do not have to meet HiQ requirements.

Teachers in in-school suspension programs (6.02)

are not required to meet HiQ requirements.

Teachers who provide academic interventions as part of an RTI framework (6.11)

must meet HiQ requirements if the student(s) is (are) scheduled for a segment of instruction in a core academic content area.

Teaching Assignments and HiQ

Teachers in alternative schools and G-NETS programs

(6.01, 6.02. 6.03)

– Teacher of Record for content • Must meet HiQ requirements for content area and grade level(s) OR • Participate in meaningful consultation with the highly qualified home school teacher – Consultative Model – Minimum of two consultations per month – Consultations documented on Alternative Education/G NETS Conference Record form (Section 5,

Georgia Title II-A Handbook

) – Facilitator of technology-based programs

Teaching Assignments and HiQ

Teachers in technology-based programs (6.07)

– Responsible for meeting HiQ requirements if delivering instruction to students – District must document quality, rigor and alignment with state curriculum of programs – District/school must document student performance data •

Long-term (20 or more consecutive days) substitute teachers (6.25)

teaching.

are not “HiQ” unless they are certified in Georgia in the field in which they are

Title II-A Requirements Related to HiQ

• Parent ‘Right To Know’ Notification • Non-HIQ Teacher Notification Letter • Remediation Plans for all non-HIQ Teachers and paraprofessionals and core academic subject teachers who do not hold a clear renewable certificate.

Title II-A Requirements Related to HiQ

• Principal Attestations • HIQ Data Review • Annual Principal/Administrator Training

Resources

• Title II-A Handbook • CAPS ( www.gapsc.com

) • Title II-A Timeline • Title II-A Education Specialist • System CPI Administrator • HIQ2 System

CAPS

CAPS ( www.gapsc.com

)

CAPS

What is “HiQ2”?

• HiQ2 is an online educator inventory system...

 …to determine if an educator meets the Federal definition of “highly qualified” when placed in a particular teaching assignment  …and to gather annual data for reporting to GaDOE and USDOE.

What is “HiQ2”?

• HiQ2 is a database – Updated annually using GaDOE’s Fall CPI data set – School systems edit HiQ2 beginning with the opening of HiQ2 – Continuously updated from the GaPSC’s Certification Information System

HiQ2

How do you get an account on www.gapsc.org?

[email protected]

The “Portal”

www.gapsc.org

www.gapsc.org the “Portal”

So what if…

Develop Remediation Plan

A

remediation plan

for each non-HiQ teacher and paraprofessional and core academic subject teachers who do not hold a clear renewable certificate must be developed in collaboration with the teacher at the time of hire.

– signed by the teacher, the principal, and the Title II-A coordinator (remediation plans for special education teachers should also be signed by the special education director) – must include time lines and target dates – must identify the teacher by name and the subject for which he/she is not HiQ

Monitor Remediation Plan

• The plan must include timelines and target dates that will enable: – the non-highly qualified teacher or paraprofessional to attain highly qualified status as soon as possible – the teacher who does not hold a clear renewable certificate to attain a clear renewable certificate as soon as possible.

• Written documentation indicating the progress made by each teacher or paraprofessional must be maintained by the LEA.

Parent Notification Requirements

1. LEAs are required to notify parents that they may request information about teacher qualifications.

2. LEAs are required to notify parents if a teacher(s) (including long-term substitutes) who is not “highly qualified” is teaching their child a core academic content course for four consecutive weeks (20 days) or more.

  Parents must be notified via standard mail.

Notification must contain – Name of teacher – Core academic content area in which teacher is not HiQ – Statement that the teacher is not highly qualified   Notification may contain other qualifications of the teacher.

Parental notification is not required for teachers who are not the teacher of record for core academic subjects or paraprofessionals who are not “highly qualified.”

Guidance and Tools for Parent Notices and Remediation Plans

• Sample Remediation Plans – Section V • Sample Letters - Section V • Parent Notification Requirements - Section V

Getting Organized

Compliance Resources

Section V Title II-A Handbook

Documentation

Monitoring

On-Site Monitoring or Self-Monitoring

(Title II-A Handbook Section V)

Closing Out Current Fiscal Year

Fiscal Responsibilities • Review Current Budget and Anticipated Expenditures • Deadline for Submission of Completion Report – October 31 Required Documentation • Ensure program implementation requirements are properly documented

IMMEDIATELY ASAP July 10 – Aug 30 July - June July 31 July - August July – June July - August July - August July – October Let’s Recap Check FY12 expenditures

Establish files for Compliance Documentation Superintendent’s Sign-off on HiQ data Develop and/or confirm evaluation process for Title II-A funded activities Deadline for ConApp submission Develop remediation plans Monitor remediation plans Parents’ “Right to Know” notification 20-Day notification letter mailed to parents Work with CPI coordinator

October 1

Deadline for budget submission Resources: Section I of Title II, Part A Handbook

1 Emily Bolton 2 Pam Daniels 3 Gerri Heard 4 Sharon Brown 5 Ann Hatchell 6 Elizabeth Zipperer 7 Leslie Morrison 8 Carolyn Rainey 9 Angie Davis

Name Anne Marie Fenton Jackson Alley Paulette Martin Orlando Phillips Mary-Ellen Snow

GaPSC

Title II-A Staff Directory

Title Program Director Data Analyst Budget Analyst Data Specialist Operations Specialist Telephone Number (404) 232-2654 404-232-2639 404-232-2644 404-232-2648 404-232-2643 Email Address [email protected]

Emily Bolton Sharon Brown Pam Daniels Angie Davis, Ed.D.

Ann Hatchell Gerri Heard Leslie Morrison, Ed.D.

Carolyn Rainey Elizabeth Zipperer Education Specialist Education Specialist Education Specialist Education Specialist Education Specialist Education Specialist Education Specialist Education Specialist Education Specialist (404) 291-9714 (404) 561-4888 (404) 290-7577 (404) 290-5054 (404) 291-3062 (404) 290-0332 ( 404) (404) 291- 3054 (404) 290-8763 [email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

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[email protected]

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[email protected]