| Turning Around Low Performing Schools | |||
Overview One of the most pressing challenges states face is dealing with schools that are persistently under-performing. The No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) raises the stakes for states considerably and requires states and districts to quickly scale-up their accountability systems so they can bring all students to proficiency. Governors and other state education leaders understand that now - more than ever - they need a comprehensive and coherent strategy of school improvement, one that effectively assists greater numbers of low-performing schools than ever before. Efforts to devise and implement accountability systems have helped identify the magnitude of the challenge, and have shown initial promise in improving some schools. However, the number of chronically low-performing schools—schools that have missed federal and/or state growth targets for four or more years—continues to grow. Each year, governors and state education officials release a list of schools that fail to meet federal and/or state performance targets. Five percent of
A new intervention model, developed by Mass Insight Education & Research Institute, calls for states to change operating conditions such as staffing and budgetary authority, build capacity through lead turnaround partners, and cluster schools for efficiency, effectiveness, and to model new kinds of school network design. This promising framework requires considerable political capital to make the changes necessary to both turn around existing schools and to close schools and scale up new models. Focus of Center Activities The State Strategies to Improve Chronically Low-Performing Schools initiative will provide four selected states with technical assistance and grant resources to develop state turnaround plans and policies that create the conditions to improve chronically low-performing schools. The NGA Center for Best Practices will host a forum at the Sofitel Hotel in Chicago, Illinois, December 2 -3, 2008. Offered in partnership with MassInsight Education & Research Institute, this forum will help teams from fifteen states to develop innovative solutions that improve chronically low performing schools. This grant program seeks to identify states with a robust standards- and accountability-based environment, culture of openness to innovation, leadership consensus, and potential funding capability to implement such an initiative. This effort is made possible with the generous support of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The ultimate goal of the initiative is to aid four states with proven will and capacity to diagnose the extent of the challenge, and develop an appropriate state-level intervention strategy that provides school leaders with sufficient authority over the operating conditions in low-performing schools to engineer lasting, fundamental change. The RFP for this initiative will be released on December 4, 2008 and states receiving grant awards will be announced in February, 2009. Reaching New Heights: Turning Around Low-Performing Schools was initiated in August of 2002 by Governor Paul Patton at the start of his tenure as NGA Chair. During this first year of the initiative, the NGA Center assisted governors and their advisors in their efforts to turnaround low-performing schools through: Knowing the Right Thing to Do: School Improvement and Performance-Based Accountability Reaching New Heights: Turning Around Low-performing Schools - A Guide for Governors Turning Around Low-Performing Schools: 2003 Institute for Governors' Education Advisors NGA's 2003 Annual Meeting Related Links:
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