Title: Supplemental Educational Services: Overview and Opportunities
1Supplemental Educational Services Overview and
Opportunities
- Association of Educational Service Agencies
Federal Advocacy Conference - September 27, 2007
- Washington, DC
2Overview of Presentation
- Background on SES
- Opportunities for ESAs
- Current Departmental Initiatives
3Background on SES
- Supplemental educational services (SES) are free
tutoring and other educational interventions that
target students from low-income families who
attend Title I schools in the second year of
school improvement, in corrective action, or in
restructuring - SES programs are high-quality, research-based,
and offered to students outside of the normal
school program
4Background on SES State Role
- Identify and approve providers, at least annually
- Maintain list of providers
- Monitor district implementation
- Monitor quality of providers and withdrawal
approval from any providers that fail to
contribute to student achievement for 2 years
5Background on SES District Role
- Notify eligible families each year
- Help parents choose a provider, if requested
- Contract with providers
- Pay providers
- Maintain student privacy
- Spend an amount equal to 20 on SES and school
choice (unless demand is less)
6Background on SES Provider Role
- May be any for-profit or non-profit entity
school or district not in improvement, including
an ESA - Apply to the State with a demonstrated record of
effectiveness - Use a program that is aligned to State standards
and local curriculum - Provide parents with progress reports
- Meet all Federal, State and local health, safety
and civil rights laws - Ensure instruction is secular, neutral, and
non-ideological
7Background on SES Family Role
- Select a provider
- Work with the provider and district to develop
student achievement goals and timetables - Receive regular progress reports
- Support student attendance and participation
8Opportunities for ESAs
- Three Roles ESAs can play
- SES providers
- Technical assistance providers to districts
- Outreach partners
9ESAs as SES Providers
- ESAs can serve a range of communities and types
of students - ESAs have experience and expertise in providing
instruction and educational support - ESAs are experienced working with States and
districts - Find out which communities in your State have a
shortage of providers and serve those areas
10ESAs as Logistical Support Partners
- Assist LEAs with the development of contracts
with providers, development of payment processes,
collecting data on student eligibility and
participation, etc - Department grant to AESA funds consortium of
small, rural school districts in Ohio,
Pennsylvania, Georgia, and South Dakota, along
with their ESAs and Catapult Learning
11ESAs as Outreach Partners
- Review LEAs outreach plans and materials
- Conduct outreach campaign to parents (print
material, radio, TV, Internet) - Enlist the help of community partners to reach
parents - Ultimate goal Help more students access
high-quality SES so that we get all students at
proficiency and close the achievement gap
12Current Initiatives SES/Public School Choice
Outreach Project
- Consists of 3 components
- Outreach Tour (Nov. March 2007)
- National Summit (June 2007)
- Guide on SES and Public School Choice (September
2007)
13Outreach Tour
- Launched by Secretary Spellings to improve
implementation and gain a more comprehensive
understanding of how public school choice and SES
are working in practice - 14 districts visited discussions with districts,
States, providers and parents
14Outreach Tour Districts Visited
- Anchorage (AK) School District
- Chicago (IL) Public Schools
- Los Angeles (CA) Unified School District
- Hillsborough County (FL) Public Schools
- Boston (MA) Public Schools
- Providence (RI) Public Schools
- Little Rock (AR) School District
15Outreach Tour Districts Visited (contd.)
- Buffalo (NY) Public Schools
- Charlotte-Mecklenburg (NC) Schools
- Denver (CO) Public School
- Albuquerque (NM) Public Schools
- Miami-Dade County (FL) Public Schools
- Baltimore City (MD) Public Schools
- Pittsburgh (PA) Public Schools
16National Summit
- June 27-8 in Washington
- Brought together states, districts, providers and
parent groups to discuss policy issues related to
public school choice and SES - Organized around the main themes of the Tour and
the Guide
17New Resource Giving Parents Options
- Resource for SES and Public School Choice
- Strategies and useful suggestions for districts
and states based, in part, on the practices of
their peers - Focuses on two main areas
- Parent notification and outreach
- Implementation
- A lot of practical advice for districts and ESAs
18Giving Parents Options Example Content
- The Parent Notice (p. 6)
- Ensure informative content
- Ensure readability (convert into simple language
translate) - Inform without overwhelming
- Ensure that the notice reaches its target
- Get feedback from parents
19Giving Parents Options Example Content
- Managing SES at the School Level (p. 31)
- Arrange for provider access to school sites
- Use SES coordinators at school site
- Integrate with other after school activities
20Resources
- Main SES site
- www.ed.gov/nclb/choice/help/ses
- SES guidance www.ed.gov/policy/elsec/guid/suppsvc
sguid.doc - Office of Innovation and Improvement
www.ed.gov/about/offices/list/oii
21Thanks.
- Stacy Kreppel
- 202-401-5938
- stacy.kreppel_at_ed.gov