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Title I -- Opportunities for Improving the Quality of Education
of Students
On October 20, 1994, President Clinton signed into law the "Improving
America's Schools Act." Title I, the largest primary and secondary
federal education program (over 7 billion dollars in FY 96), was reauthorized
in this legislation, which among other things, rewrote the Elementary and
Secondary Education Act. Although Title I was established in 1965 to provide
"extra" educational services to the nation's poorest and lowest
achieving students, history indicates that for over 30 years, the program
has failed to meet its potential. The 1994 rewrite was designed to change
that conclusion dramatically.
Title I now provides parents, advocates, and school communities with
a tool for broader school improvements. With renewed energy and collective
advocacy, communities can work to ensure that Title I is used to provide
a quality education for our nation's low-income students.
A Framework for Program Quality
The reauthorized Title I provides strong legal handles for ensuring a
quality education for students served by Title I funds. The law requires
States to use the same high standards for these students as they do for
all other students. It requires schools and local education agencies (LEAs)
to develop programs that will enable students to meet the standards, as
measured by performance on State assessments which are aligned with the
standards. Further the law calls for high quality professional staff to
teach Title I students a challenging curriculum, and effectively designed
individual assistance to students who are having difficulty achieving the
standards. Parents have the right to be involved in planning their children's
education, and to see that their children's schools comply with the requirements
of Title I. Through a series of requirements about the content of their
Title I programs, the reauthorized law charges schools and LEAs with ensuring
that Title I students are not given a second rate education. And the law
mandates that schools and LEAs succeed in providing quality programs which
enable Title I students to meet the state standards. Schools and LEAs which
continually fail their students will be put in improvement -- during which
they must work to make their program more effective.
Schools and LEAs which are in improvement and continue to fail will have
sanctions imposed against them, including, for example, the reconstitution
of school staff or the withholding of funds.
These better legal handles do not guarantee improved Title I programs.
Without effective advocacy to ensure proper implementation, Title I students
across the country could be cheated out of the quality education the new
law promises. One need only examine Chapter 1 implementation after the 1988
reauthorization to understand the risk. Although the 1988 law was designed
to ensure the active participation of parents in the decision-making process,
Chapter 1 programs were often run with minimal input from parents concerning
the core elements of the program. Many programs did not, as the law required,
ensure integration between the students' Chapter 1 and regular classes,
nor did they ensure that students were taught the "basic and advanced
skills that all students were expected to master." Many program pulled
students out of regular classes and taught them watered-down curricula which
virtually guaranteed that students would never catch up to their peers,
further undermining the goals of the program.
Title I programs could face the same fate unless parents, advocates,
and educators understand the new requirements and are committed to ensuring
that they are fully implemented.
Schoolwide Programs
The reauthorization relaxes the requirements schools must meet in order
to become schoolwide programs. Schools that have at least a 50% low-income
school population can use their Title I funds to improve the educational
program of the entire school, instead of targeting the funds on only those
students who are most at risk of failing to meet the standards. With proper
implementation, this represents great possibility for change. The law makes
many specific requirements of schools implementing schoolwide programs,
including that; schools use reform strategies based on effective means of
improving the achievement of children; schools have an effective and accelerated
curriculum; students be taught by highly qualified professional staff members
who have the appropriate professional development opportunities they need
to provide effective instruction to Title I students; Title I be coordinated
with other programs; and schools provide individual assistance to students
within a schoolwide program who need extra assistance to meet the State
standards. Without hard work on the part of entire school communities to
ensure that these requirements are met, and that Title I is the catalyst
for real reform, Title I funds in schoolwide programs have the potential
to become general aid to existing mediocre programs.
Planning for schoolwide programs is an in-depth process for which the
law also spells out specific requirements. The law requires that a school
implementing a schoolwide program conduct a needs assessment, and develop
a comprehensive plan to meet the needs of various constituencies in the
school. The law prescribes an important role for parents in the schoolwide
planning process; parents must jointly develop the plan with school staff.
Advocates must ensure that the schoolwide program planning process is used
as an opportunity for entire school communities to engage in a substantive
dialogue about the needs of low-income students, and determine collectively
how to meet those needs.
Without efforts to ensure that all constituencies are involved in substantive
ways in every stage of planning schoolwide programs, and ensuring through
rigorous evaluation that requirements of the law are adhered to, schoolwide
plans will be little more than words on paper with little impact on the
direction of the programs, and schoolwide programs will be little more than
general aid.
Targeted Assistance Schools
Targeted Assistance Schools present different challenges to parents,
advocates, and schools. These programs, either because the school does not
have a high enough population of low-income students to qualify for schoolwide
status or because a school community chooses not to run a schoolwlde program,
must use their Title I funds to serve those students who are most at risk
of failing to meet the state standards. While Targeted Assistance Schools
may not create the same obvious incentives for broad-based school reform,
Congress was clear during the reauthorization that these programs are to
be changed, dramatically if necessary, to comply with a series of requirements
aimed at ensuring that Title I students in these more "traditional"
programs are receiving a high quality education. Students served by Title
I programs in these schools must be enabled to meet the State standards.
Schools must use effective instructional strategies that help provide accelerated,
high-quality curriculum and minimize pulling students out of class. The
Title I program must be coordinated with the regular programs and taught
by high quality professional staff. Further, the school must put into effect
strategies for increasing parent involvement, such as the provision of family
literacy services. Through these requirements and others, Congress charged
schools with implementing creative strategies for enabling those students
who are furthest behind to meet the State standards for all students. This
offers schools an opportunity to develop new curricula and pedagogy, design
after school and summer programs to supplement students regular education,
and work closely with parents to ensure that they have the tools necessary
to participate fully in their childrens education. Without the involvement
of broad constituencies in the planning and implementing of these programs,
they could easily become the stereotypical Title I programs, pulling students
out of science, math, language arts, social studies, or other classes daily
to teach them a watered-down curriculum in an ineffectual add-on reading
or math program.
Parent Involvement
The law also offers great possibilities in the area of parent involvement.
Each school and each local education agency must have a written parent involvement
policy, jointlydeveloped with and approved by parents, which, among other
things, outlines how parents will be involved in all aspects of the planning
and review of Title I programs. The school level policy must include a school-parent
compact which outlines how schools, parents, and students will share the
responsibility for ensuring student achievement. Parents must also jointly
develop the written schoolwide program plan and the local education agency
Title I plan. The term "joint development" should mean that parents
sit down as partners with school staff to engage in a serious examination
of the needs of Title I students and to discuss the best ways for a school
or LEA to ensure that those needs are met. History proves, however, that
the interests of parents are often marginalized. Frequently, schools and
LEAs expect one or two parents to represent the views of all Title I parents,
providing no real opportunity for bringing together broad groups of parents
to participate in informed decision-making. Too often, parents are presented
with a Title I plan after it has been developed, and told that if they do
not approve it, the school or LEA will not get any Title I funds that year.
Title I Programs Should Be Implemented Now
Title I went into effective July 1, 1995. Yet in many places, Title I
programs still resemble the old Chapter 1 model, based on extensive pull-out
programs in reading and math, low expectations for students, and few links
to real school reform. It is critical that parents and their advocates get
involved in the important decisions that are shaping how this law is implemented
from now until 1999, when this reauthorization ends. Many of the decisions
about how Title I programs will be shaped through at least 1999 are being
made now, as schools, LEAs, and SEAs work to develop their Title I plans,
schools and LEAs draft their parent involvement policies, and school communities
write their school-parent compacts. State Title I plans are written only
once during the reauthorization period, with amendments made as needed.
Thus, ensuring that the plans are of high quality and take into account
the needs of all Title I students in the State is critical. At the same
time, many states are in the process of making fundamental decisions about
how to implement education reform using systems of standards and assessments
decisions which affect Title I. Many of these decisions are long-term, and
thus will have an impact on Title I during the entire reauthorization period.
Title I programs should look different than Chapter 1 programs in many
ways. There should be an accelerated curriculum taught by high quality teachers.
Title I programs -- or whole school programs in the case of schoolwide schools
-- should enable all students served by Title I to meet high standards.
Parents should be deeply involved in the planning, review, and improvement
of Title I programs, including planning for the improvement of the whole
school in schoolwide programs. The entire school community should talk about
what the standards are and how they will determine whether students are
meeting the standards. If students are not meeting the standards, parents
and schools must work together to come up with a plan for making sure they
can improve.
In short, Title I provides good handles for improving the core quality
of education for low-Income students. But without the hard work on the part
of entire school communities, the admirable goals of Title I and the specific
requirements the law makes will not be met.
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