Transcript Document

Innovation and Policy: Making
Legislation Work for Your Organization
2011 FACE Symposium
John Bailey
DutkoGrayling
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Travel time to major cities (in hours and days) and shipping lane density
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Something there is that does not like a wall,
that wants it down…
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Family and Community Engagement
 “Before I built a wall I'd ask to know
What I was walling in or walling out…”
 Breaking down the walls between schools, home,
and community.
 Difficult to find a more essential element of school
reform that it more important, yet more neglected,
than strengthening the involvement of families and
communities in school.
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Evolution of Federal Policy
 Version 1.0 Educate America: Title I requires parent
involvement and consultation.
 Version 2.0 NCLB: Tutoring options for students.
New attention given to community and faith-based
organizations.
 Version 3.0 Stimulus: Integration of community and
family engagement in multiple programs: Promise
Neighborhoods, Race to the Top, School
Improvement Grants, ESEA reauthorization.
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"Reforming our schools to deliver a world-class education is a
shared responsibility–the task cannot be shouldered by our
nation's teachers and principals alone... We must recognize the
importance of communities and families in supporting their
children's education, because a parent is a child's first teacher.
We must support families, communities, and schools working in
partnership to deliver services and supports that address the full
range of student needs.”
President Barack Obama,
A Blueprint for Reform
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Striving Readers
 Grants to improve middle and high school literacy
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Georgia
Louisiana
Montana
Nevada
Pennsylvania
Texas
$25 million
$28 million
$7 million
$14 million
$38 million
$66 million
 State plans include parent and family engagement
elements.
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Race to the Top: Early Learning Challenge
 35 states, D.C. and Puerto Rico are competing for $500
million in competitive grants designed to improve early
learning, particularly literacy. Awards expected in
December.
 State plans must include:
– Strategies are successfully used to engage families in supporting
their children’s development and learning;
– Promoting health and family engagement;
– Promoting family support and engagement statewide, including
by leveraging other existing resources such as through home
visiting programs, other family-serving agencies, and through
outreach to family, friend, and neighbor caregivers.
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School Improvement Grants
 Formula grants to States to assist lowest 5%
performing schools in each state.
 More than $530 million this year.
 Schools choose from several “turnaround models”
but all require family and community engagement.
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Title I
 Formula Grant Program that provides districts with extra
resources to help improve instruction in high poverty schools
to provide an equal opportunity to achieve.
 Nationally, funding for Title I, Part A for the coming school
year (2011-12) is $14.4 billion.
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Promise Neighborhoods
 The vision is to provide assistance to communities to
ensure children have access to great schools and
strong systems of family and community support.
• Identifying and increasing the capacity of
community organizations;
• Building a complete continuum of cradleto-career solutions of both educational
programs and family and community
supports, with great schools at the
center;
• Integrating programs and breaking down
agency “silos” so that solutions are
implemented effectively and efficiently
across agencies;
• Sustaining and scaling successful
initiatives.
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Child Care Development Fund
 $5 billion to serve families through a single,
integrated child care subsidy programs.
 States coordinate CCDF with Head Start, pre-k, and
other early childhood programs.
 Includes community engagement and afterschool
programming.
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AmeriCorps/AmeriCorps VISTA
 Volunteers commit to serve full-time for a year at a
nonprofit organization working to fight illiteracy,
improve health services, and strengthen their
community.
 Engages nearly 75,000 volunteers each year, but
more than 1 million community volunteers.
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ESEA
 Senate ESEA Bill requires a family engagement plan
that:
– increases student academic achievement and college and
career readiness;
– provide parents and family members with the skills and
opportunities necessary to become full partners in their
child’s education;
– improve child development;
– strengthen relationships and partnerships among school
personnel (including edu
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Every Program is An Opportunity…
 Family and community engagement is a means to an end.
 When seen in that way, every program becomes an
opportunity for family and community engagement to:
– Improve student achievement
– Turn around schools
– Strengthen PreK-8 reading programs
 Begins with a belief that student success in the classroom is
set against the backdrop of a child’s home and community.
 A school will not achieve equity and excellence for all of the
students if it does not acknowledge and include the families
and community members of its students.
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Where to Find Additional Information
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Federal Budget Allocations By State:
http://www2.ed.gov/about/overview/budget/statetables/index.html
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Race to the Top Plans, Guidance, Budgets:
http://www2.ed.gov/programs/racetothetop/index.html
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Race to the Top Early Learning Challenge:
http://www2.ed.gov/about/inits/ed/earlylearning/elcf-factsheet.html
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Striving Readers
http://www2.ed.gov/programs/strivingreaders/index.html
 Promise Neighborhoods
http://www2.ed.gov/programs/promiseneighborhoods/index.html
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Scholastic Funding Alignments
http://teacher.scholastic.com/products/classroombooks/funding.htm
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Parental Information and Resource Centers (PIRCs)
http://www.nationalpirc.org/
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