1 / 17

Title I Faculty Presentation

Title I Faculty Presentation. Department of Federal and State Programs 434-8017 or PX 48017. No Child Left Behind Act. NCLB is the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act originally passed under President Johnson’s Administration Title I is part of the NCLB Act

aneko
Download Presentation

Title I Faculty Presentation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Title I Faculty Presentation Department of Federal and State Programs 434-8017 or PX 48017

  2. No Child Left Behind Act • NCLB is the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act originally passed under President Johnson’s Administration • Title I is part of the NCLB Act • All requirements regarding Title I are specified in theNCLB Act of 2001

  3. Title I • 130 Title I schools in Palm Beach County for FY11 • 101 Public Schools • 23 Charter Schools • 6 Alternative Schools • Charter and Alternative Schools must follow same requirements as other public schools

  4. Purpose of Title I • To ensure ALL children have a fair, equitable, and significant opportunity for a high quality education

  5. Qualifying for FY11 Title I Funding • Each year schools are identified as Title I based on the percentage of students in the school eligible for free and reduced (f/r) price meals on Date Certain. • Date Certain for the FY11 school year was December 18, 2009. • Schools meeting the minimum percentage qualify for Title I funding. The FY11 percentages are: • 49.5% elementary schools • 49.5% middle schools • 44.5% high schools

  6. Qualifying for FY11 Title I Funding • The number of eligible students is multiplied by the per pupil allocation. Example • On Date Certain, 312 students were eligible for f/r priced meals at Sunshine Elementary. This group represents 69% of the total student population. Per pupil allocation = $355 (set by District) School allocation = 312 x $355 or $110,760

  7. Highly Qualified Staff • ALL core subject area teachers must be highly qualified: • Bachelor’s degree • State certification • For elementary teachers, a rigorous test • For new middle/secondary teachers, a rigorous test or major coursework • ALL non-instructional staffproviding academic support to studentsmust be highly qualified: • Two years of college or • 60 college credits or • Pass a rigorous test • Teachers must be highly qualified upon hiring in the following core content areas: elementary education, reading, math, science, social science, English, and foreign language

  8. Professional Development • Must be evidenced-based and on-going • Must be reflected in the School Improvement Plan/Schoolwide Plan (SIP/SWP) • Must address the needs of students in all subgroups with an emphasis on those not making AYP • All out-of-county travel must be documented in the SIP/SWP and related to subgroups not makting AYP

  9. Required for Audit Documentation 9

  10. Parents’ Right to Know • The professional qualifications of their child’s classroom teacher and paraprofessional. • If their child is taught by a teacher who is not highly qualified for four or more consecutive weeks, the parents must receive timely notice. • FCAT results must be provided to parents regarding the achievement level of their child.

  11. Family Involvement • Karen Mapp, parent involvement researcher at Harvard Graduate School of Education, says students in schools with solid family involvement programs: • Are more likely to enroll in higher-level programs and earn more credits • Have better social skills, behavior, and adapt more easily to school • Attend more regularly and are more likely to graduate

  12. Family Involvement School-Parent Compact A compact is an agreement between the home and the school, which outlines how families, staff and students will share the responsibility for improving student achievement. • Written with input from parents and staff • Required to document distribution of Compact • Compact reviewed with parents at a parent/teacher conference • Addresses the importance of communication between teachers and parents on an ongoing basis

  13. Family Involvement Family Involvement Policy/Plan • Jointly developed with input from parents and staff • Required to document distribution of Family Involvement Policy • Provide parent trainings and meetings at flexible times • Involve parents in an organized, ongoing and timely way in planning, reviewing, and improving Title I programs • Provide parents with an opportunity to submit dissenting views if the SIP/SWP is not acceptable to them • Educate teachers and other staff on the value and contributions of parents; how to reach out to, communicate with, and work with parents

  14. Family Involvement Positive Impact Activities: • Frequent face-to-face, written or phone contact between teachers and parents • School-based parent activities, which help train parents to work with their children at home • Interactive homework assignments that require parents to participate in learning • www.communityschools.org

  15. Accountability • Participate in the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test (FCAT) • Meet State mandated proficiency levels • Participate in NCLB School Choice if AYP is not made two years in a row

  16. Adequate Yearly Progress • AYP reports the performance and participation of subgroups according to: • Race/ethnicity • Socio-economics • Students with Disabilities (SWD) • Limited English Proficient (LEP/ELL) • AYP Targets for FY11 • Reading - 79% of students need to score at level 3 and above • Math - 80% of students need to score at level 3 and above

  17. Consequences For Not Making AYP All schools receive AYP designation, but only Title I Schools are identified as School in Need of Improvement (SINI) and receive consequences for not meeting AYP. Only Title I schools receive the consequences for not meeting AYP. The following chart shows the accumulation of consequences for not making AYP (NAYP).

More Related