Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Pennsylvania again not chosen for Race to the Top federal grant

ATLANTA (AP) — Pennsylvania will not be part of the second round of federal "Race to the Top" grants.
More than 13 million students and 1 million educators will share $3.4 billion from the second round of the federal “Race to the Top” grant competition, the U.S. Education Department said Tuesday.
The department chose nine states — Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Maryland, New York, North Carolina, Ohio and Rhode Island — and the District of Columbia for the grants. Education Secretary Arne Duncan said 25,000 schools will get money to raise student learning and close the achievement gap.
The “Race to the Top” program, part of President Barack Obama’s economic stimulus plan, rewards states for taking up ambitious changes to improve struggling schools. The competition instigated a wave of reforms across the country, as states passed new teacher accountability policies and lifted caps on charter schools to boost their chances of winning.
“These states show what is possible when adults come together to do the right thing for children,” Duncan said in a conference call with reporters. “Every state that applied showed a tremendous amount of leadership and a bold commitment to education reform. The creativity and innovation in each of these applications is breathtaking.”
In the first round of the contest in the spring, just two states were winners — Tennessee and Delaware — and they scored more than 440 out of a possible 500 points. In this round, Duncan said all 10 winners scored more than 440 points, showing improvement in the applications.
The department wanted to choose more winners but “simply ran out of money,” Duncan said. He said he hopes to reward more applicants next year with another $1.3 billion for a third round.
For the winners, the grants mean a cash infusion at a time when education funding is dwindling, forcing teacher layoffs and program reductions. The awards range from $75 million for Rhode Island and D.C. to $700 million for New York.
“While this has seemed more like a marathon at times, now the real race begins,” said Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue, whose state is getting $400 million. “This is truly a unique opportunity to implement a Georgia-created plan that will accelerate our work in improving student achievement.”
Georgia came in third in the first round of the $4.35 billion competition in March, losing out to Tennessee and Delaware, which are sharing $600 million. Thirty-five states and the District of Columbia applied for the second round of the competition, and the Education Department named 19 finalists in July.
The applicants named winners Tuesday will share $3.4 billion. Another $350 million is coming in a separate competition for states creating new academic assessments.
In their applications, winners promised to support charter schools, create tracking systems that follow students through their academic careers, and improve teacher training programs at state colleges.
One notable absence on the list of winners was Colorado, which passed a controversial law this year that ties teacher pay to student performance and allows the state to strip tenure from low-performing instructors. Colorado officials said they will forge ahead with reforms, though progress will be slowed without the federal cash.
“They clearly in Washington have a tin ear about how we do things in the West,” said Lt. Gov. Barbara O’Brien, who helped make the state’s pitch to the competition’s judges.
Like Colorado, at least 17 states vying for the money reformed teacher evaluation systems to include student achievement, and more than a dozen changed laws to foster the growth of charter schools. Dozens also adopted Common Core State Standards, the uniform math and reading benchmarks developed by the Council of Chief State School Officers and the National Governors Association.
“The change unleashed by conditioning federal funding on bold and forward-looking state education policies is indisputable,” the Democrats for Education Reform said in a statement. “Under the president’s leadership, local civil rights, child advocacy, business and education reform groups, in collaboration with those state and local teacher unions ready for change, sprung into action to achieve things that they had been waiting and wanting to do for years.”
In a speech announcing the finalists last month, Duncan called the change a “quiet revolution.”
“This is not about funding a few states on a pilot basis. This is about a national movement,” he said Tuesday.
But some education groups said “Race to the Top” rewarded states that have weak reform efforts while leaving out those like Colorado and Louisiana that have made strides to overhaul their schools.
“It becomes clear that the vagaries of peer reviewers and the prowess of grant writers are what drive results in such competitions, not true policy change, political courage, leadership or public commitment to reform,” said Mike Petrilli, a former Education Department official who is now vice president at the Fordham Institute.
Between both rounds of the competition, 46 states and the District of Columbia applied.
The competition for many states was an uphill battle, with teacher unions hesitant to sign on to reforms directly tying teacher evaluations to student performance on standardized tests, and education leaders concerned winning meant giving up too much local control.
Florida was among the states that got resistance from many teachers unions in the first round of the competition but won their support after taking a more collaborative approach in round two.
“I think it shows that when the governor brought all the stakeholders together, we came up with an application that was strong and doable,” said Andy Ford, president of the Florida Education Association, the statewide teachers’ union.
Other states, like Indiana, dropped out of the competition because of the lack of union support for the state’s application.
© 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Pennsylvania named Race to the Top Finalist

Pennsylvania is one of 19 states named a finalist Wednesday in the second round of the federal Race to the Top funding program.
U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan said $3 billion was available in this round. Pennsylvania could get $400 million.
Thirty-five states and Washington D.C. submitted blueprints for the reform program. Before the first round of the program, districts had to sign off on participation, with signatures from the district teacher's union president, school board president and superintendent. Central Greene was the only district to sign on in Washington and Greene counties.
In addition to Pennsylvnia, the other finalists are Arizona, California, Colorado, Washington D.C., Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Rhode Island and South Carolina.
The finalists will travel to Washington D.C. during the week of Aug. 9 to present their plans to peer reviewers. The department of education will announce the winners in September
In the first round, Delaware and Tennessee won grants based on their school reform plans.

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Thursday, March 4, 2010

Pennsylvania among Race to the top finalists

The U.S. Department of Education announced that 15 states and the District of Columbia, including Pennsylvania, will advance as finalists for Phase 1 of the Race to the Top competition.
Race to the Top is the Department's $4.35 billion effort to re-shape America's educational system to better engage and prepare students for success in a competitive 21st century economy and workplace, according to a DOE news release.
If Pennsylvania is selected as a winner, the state could receive $400 million, according to a Pennsylvania Department of Education news release. Each district had to decide whether to participate in the application process. Superintendents, school board presidents and teachers' unions had to sign the memorandum of understanding for the grant. In Washington and Greene counties, only Central Greene had all three signatures.
States competing for Race to the Top funds were asked to document past education reform successes, as well as outline plans to: extend reforms using college and career-ready standards and assessments; build a workforce of highly effective educators; create educational data
systems to support student achievement; and turn around their lowest-performing schools.
The finalists are:
* Colorado
* Delaware
* District of Columbia
* Florida
* Georgia
* Illinois
* Kentucky
* Louisiana
* Massachusetts
* New York
* North Carolina
* Ohio
* Pennsylvania
* Rhode Island
* South Carolina
* Tennessee

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Thursday, January 21, 2010

Forty states apply for federal Race to the Top grants

Forty states and the District of Columbia applied for the first round of $4 billion in the Race to the Top Fund competition, which pits states against each other for desperately needed money, bragging rights, and leverage to implement controversial education reforms such as merit pay for teachers, Education Week reports.

The 10 states that did not apply by the first round’s Jan. 19 deadline were: Alaska, Maryland, Maine, Mississippi, Montana, Nevada, North Dakota, Texas, Vermont, and Washington. Those states that did not apply, and any losing states from the first round, will be able to compete in the second round of competition, which is set for June.

“This exceeded our expectations,” U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, who has made Race to the Top the most high-profile piece of his education reform agenda, said in a statement. “We received word from 40 states that they intended to apply, and thought there might be some drop-off. There wasn’t.”

Of the 10 states that did not apply in the first round, most did not come as a surprise. Texas Gov. Rick Perry, a Republican, leveled sharp criticism at the Obama administration earlier this month, declaring his state would not compete for fear of a “federal takeover” of schools.

Rural states such as Montana and North Dakota had expressed reluctance because of the competition’s focus on education strategies they say may not work in their states, such as charter schools.

And Maryland state schools Superintendent Nancy S. Grasmick wants to seek legislative changes—to make it more difficult for teachers to get tenure and to link teacher evaluations to student test scores—before applying for the federal grants.

The current Race to the Top program is funded by $4 billion in one-time money from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, the economic-stimulus package passed by Congress last year. Today’s deadline comes as President Barack Obama announced his plans to seek $1.35 billion from Congress in his fiscal 2011 budget request to extend Race to the Top for another year and open it up to school districts. ("Obama to Seek $1.35 Billion Race to Top Expansion," January 19, 2010.)

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Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Participating Race to the Top schools

Participating school districts (those marked with asterisks have at least one school that will participate in the RTTT Turnaround Initiative):

ABINGTON SD

ALIQUIPPA SD**

ALLEGHENY VALLEY SD

ALLENTOWN CITY SD

ARMSTRONG SD

BALD EAGLE AREA SD

BANGOR AREA SD

BELLWOOD-ANTIS SD

BETHLEHEM AREA SD

BIG SPRING SD

BLACKLICK VALLEY SD

BROCKWAY AREA SD

BURRELL SD

CATASAUQUA AREA SD

CENTRAL BUCKS SD

CENTRAL CAMBRIA SD

CENTRAL GREENE SD

CENTRAL YORK SD

CHESTER-UPLAND SD**

CHICHESTER SD

CLAIRTON CITY SD**

COATESVILLE AREA SD

CORNELL SD**

CRESTWOOD SD

CURWENSVILLE AREA SD

DALLAS SD

DERRY AREA SD

DUQUESNE CITY SD**

EAST ALLEGHENY SD**

EAST LYCOMING SD

EAST STROUDSBURG AREA SD

ELIZABETH FORWARD SD

ERIE CITY SD**

FANNETT-METAL SD

FORT LEBOEUF SD

FRAZIER SD

GIRARD SD

GLENDALE SD

GREATER LATROBE SD

GREENSBURG SALEM SD

HARBOR CREEK SD

HARMONY AREA SD

HARRISBURG CITY SD**

HAVERFORD TOWNSHIP SD

HAZLETON AREA SD**

HERMITAGE SD

HOLLIDAYSBURG AREA SD

INDIANA AREA SD

INTERBORO SD

IROQUOIS SD

JEANNETTE CITY SD

JENKINTOWN SD

JIM THORPE AREA SD

KANE AREA SD

KISKI AREA SD

KUTZTOWN AREA SD

LANCASTER SD**

LEBANON SD**

LEHIGHTON AREA SD

MARION CENTER AREA SD

MARPLE NEWTOWN SD

MCKEESPORT AREA SD**

MEYERSDALE AREA SD

MIDLAND BOROUGH SD

MINERSVILLE AREA SD

MOHAWK AREA SD

MONESSEN CITY SD

MONTGOMERY AREA SD

MONTOURSVILLE AREA SD

MORRISVILLE BOROUGH SD

MOUNT UNION AREA SD**

MUHLENBERG SD

NEW BRIGHTON AREA SD

NEW KENSINGTON-ARNOLD SD

NORRISTOWN SD**

NORTH EAST SD

NORTHERN BEDFORD COUNTY SD

NORTHERN CAMBRIA SD

OCTORARA AREA SD

OXFORD AREA SD

PANTHER VALLEY SD

PENN CAMBRIA SD

PENN HILLS SD**

PENNCREST SD

PENN-DELCO SD

PERKIOMEN VALLEY SD

PHILADELPHIA CITY SD**

PITTSBURGH SD**

PITTSTON AREA SD

PLEASANT VALLEY SD

POTTSGROVE SD

POTTSVILLE AREA SD

QUAKER VALLEY SD

QUAKERTOWN COMMUNITY SD

READING SD**

RIVERVIEW SD

SALISBURY-ELK LICK SD

SCHUYLKILL HAVEN AREA SD

SCRANTON CITY SD

SHARON CITY SD

SOUTH PARK SD

SOUTH WESTERN SD

SOUTHEAST DELCO SD**

SOUTHERN YORK CO SD

SPRING COVE SD

SPRING-FORD AREA SD

TURKEYFOOT VALLEY AREA SD**

TUSSEY MOUNTAIN SD

UNION CITY AREA SD

UPPER DARBY SD**

UPPER MORELAND TOWNSHIP SD

WARREN COUNTY SD

WEATHERLY AREA SD

WEST ALLEGHENY SD

WEST YORK AREA SD

WILLIAM PENN SD**

WILLIAMSPORT AREA SD

WILSON SD

WISSAHICKON SD

YORK CITY SD**


Participating Charter Schools


Ad Prima CS

Alliance for Progress CS

Antonia Pantoja Community CS

Architecture and Design CHS

Bear Creek Community CS

Belmont Academy CS

Boys Latin of Philadelphia CS

Center for Student Learning CS at Pennsbury

Chester Community CS

Christopher Columbus CS

Commonwealth Connections Academy CS

Crispus Attucks Youthbuild CS

Delaware Valley CHS

Erin Dudley Forbes CS

First Phila CS for Literacy

Franklin Towne CES

Franklin Towne CHS

Freire CS

Global Leadership Academy CS

Green Woods CS

Hardy Williams Academy CS

Independence CS

Khepera CS

KIPP Academy Charter School

KIPP West Philadelphia Preparatory Chart

Laboratory CS

Lehigh Valley CHS for the Performing Arts

Lincoln CS

Lincoln Leadership Academy CS

Lincoln Park Performing Arts CS

Manchester Academic CS

Maritime Academy Charter School

MAST Community Charter School

Mastery CS--Shoemaker Campus

Montessori Regional CS

New Foundations CS

New Hope Academy CS

New Media Technology CS

Nueva Esperanza Academy CS

Pennsylvania Cyber CS

People for People CS

Philadelphia Harambee Inst CS

Philadelphia Performing Arts CS

Planet Abacus CS

Pocono Mountain Charter School

Propel CS-East

Propel CS-Homestead

Propel CS-McKeesport

Propel CS--Montour

Renaissance Acad-Edison CS

Roberto Clemente CS

Russell Byers CS

Sankofa Freedom Academy CS

Tacony Academy CS

Tuscarora Blended Learning CS

Universal Institute CS

Urban League of Pittsburgh CS

West Oak Lane CS

West Phila. Achievement CES
Source: Pennsylvania Department of Education

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Monday, January 18, 2010

Corrected version: Most Washington, Greene districts not eligible for latest federal grant

Corrected Version: Central Greene School District is the only Washington or Greene county district that is eligible for the latest competitive federal grant for school reform worth $4.35 billion, according to a teachers’ union spokesman.
Like the Pennsylvania Department of Education, the Pennsylvania State Education Association tracked the number of districts that applied for the Race to the Top grant. PDE anticipates having a final count early next week.
Pennsylvania districts had to submit a memorandum of understanding to the state by Wednesday if they wanted to participate.
PSEA spokesman David Broderic estimated Friday that roughly 100 districts out of 500 across the state, including Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Reading and Allentown, signed the memorandum of understanding for the program. The documents required the signature of each district superintendent, school board president and teachers’ union president. None in Washington and Greene had all three signatures, Broderic said.

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Thursday, November 12, 2009

Scoring system for school aid

Educators argue endlessly about the merits of one idea or another to improve schools. But with billions of dollars at stake, the Obama administration Thursday will lay out a novel federal system for keeping score, the Washington Post reported.

Making education funding a priority? Good for 10 points. Demonstrating significant progress in raising achievement and closing gaps? That's worth 30. Developing and adopting common academic standards, turning around the lowest-achieving schools and ensuring successful conditions for high-performing charter schools: Those are worth 40 each.

But improving teacher and principal effectiveness based on performance is worth more than any specific improvement: 58 points.

Those are the priorities in the Education Department's rulebook for the unprecedented $4.35 billion Race to the Top reform competition. States and the District of Columbia are invited to compete. Bids will be rated on the point system, which Education Secretary Arne Duncan approved. A perfect bid will score 500 points and could be worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

The call to action on teacher-principal improvement, which means factoring student test score growth into job evaluations, is likely to draw intense scrutiny from unions.

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