Title: The 21st Century Community Learning Center Competitive Grant Program:
1Welcome!
- The 21st Century Community Learning Center
Competitive Grant Program - A Workshop for Program and Proposal Developers
2Introductions!
- Introduce yourself to a neighbor you dont know
and share with each other one positive impact
that after school programs have had in your
school, district, community, county..
3Objectives
- Understand the key requirements for and
components of a successful 21st CCLC proposal - Develop skills in framing required program
components - Have the capacity to determine the kinds of
partnerships and partnership documentation needed
for a successful proposal - Understand the key evaluation requirements of the
RFA - Gain tools for the management of the 21st CCLC
proposal development process and - Have fun, make new friends, and connect with
other people/organizations seeking to develop
high-quality 21st CCLC programs.
4Overview of the 21st CCLC Program and the Request
for Applications
5Program Purpose
- .establish or expand community learning centers
that provide students with academic enrichment
opportunities along with activities designed to
complement the students regular academic
program. Community learning centers must also
offer families of these students literacy and
related educational development services. At the
same time, centers help working parents by
providing a safe environment for students during
nonschool hours or periods when school is not in
session. - 21st Century Community Learning Centers Program,
Cohort 4, Request for Applications
6Key Facts
- Due Date March 12, 2007 - Received by the CDE
(After School Program Office) - Funding Available up to 112,500/elementary
150,000/middle 250,000 per high school. - Funding Duration 5 years, reauthorized on an
annual basis - Eligible Applicants Local education agencies
(LEAs) Non-profit agencies City and county
government agencies CBOs FBOs Private schools
For-profit corporations Consortia of two or
more of the above agencies.
7Key Changes from Previous Cohorts
- Direct Grants!
- Increase in set-aside for high school (from 6 to
50)! - Stronger alignment of ASES and 21st CCLC
- Evaluation systems to include measures that align
to local program/community priorities
8Key Resources
- CDE
- http//www.cde.ca.gov/fg/fo/af/
- Bay Area Partnership
- http//www.bayareapartnership.org/
- Title I Information
- http//www.cde.ca.gov/ta/ac/ay/tidatafiles.asp
921st CCLC Overview
- Potential Request Components
- Eligibility and Priorities
- Funding Levels
10Potential Request Components
Core
Optional
11Eligibility
- Funding Eligibility
- A school may participate in only one 21st CCLC
application for funding. - Federal law requires that a majority of students
must come from - Schools eligible for Title I Schoolwide Programs
- AND/OR
- Schools that serve 40 or more of students from
low-income families eligible for the free and
reduced lunch program - CDE may accept additional eligibility criteria
that would allow the inclusion of schools below
the 40 free and reduced threshold, such as
feeder school data and other potential measures
of need that may not be captured in a schools
free and reduced lunch numbers. --- Document
Thoroughly!
12Funding Priorities
- Understanding the Competitive Priority
- In addition to basic eligibility, proposals that
meet all of the following conditions fulfill the
competitive priority - 50 percent of the participating schools are
identified as in need of improvement (Title I,
Section 1116 of NCLB Act) ----Also known as
Program Improvement or PI schools---- - Submitted jointly by an LEA receiving Title I,
Part A funds and at least one CBO or other public
or private entity. - Complete Competitive Priority Memorandum of
Understanding (special additional MOU see ASSETs
RFA page 33, Elementary/Middle page 30.)
13Funding Priorities
14Funding Levels
15Developing the Proposal Core The Program
Components
16Program Development - Key Considerations
- Programs should be developed by collaborative
partnerships - Programs should be tightly integrated with the
school day (and the school culture). - Build on strong assessments.
- Use the assessments to help participants
replicate success/build on assets - Program sites do not have to be located at a
school, but must be as safe and accessible as a
school site. - Each collaborative will determine the appropriate
frequency of student attendance, but CDE
recommends that elementary students attend 5 days
per week and middle school students must attend
at least 3 days per week. High school grants
have no minimum attendance policy. - For maximum impact program components should be
integrated, building upon each other.
17Three Program Components
- Academic Achievement
- Enrichment
- Family Literacy
18Academic Achievement
- Core Focus Provide a broad array of activities
that help students, particularly those in
low-performing schools, to meet state and local
student academic achievement standards in core
academic subject areas. - Tutoring and Homework Assistance is Mandatory!
19Sample Academic Program Activities
20Sample Academic Program Activities
21Academic Achievement Excellence Per the Rubric
(Selected)
- Thoroughly describe proposed activities to
address each program element and component
included in the application. - Thoroughly demonstrate that the organization has
experience or the promise of experience in
providing educational and related activities that
will enhance the academic performance,
achievement, and positive youth development of
students. - Thoroughly describe how the activities will be
effective in improving student academic
performance including performance measures and
citing scientifically based research providing
evidence that the program will help students meet
core state and local academic standards.
22Enrichment
- The educational enrichment component must offer
an array of additional services, programs, and
activities that reinforce and complement the
regular academic program of participating
students. - Services must be actively coordinated with the
students regular high school day program. - Enrichment element activities should be
developed in alignment with appropriate
California content standards and
standards-aligned instructional materials,
related California curriculum frameworks, and
other research-based practices.
23Sample Enrichment Program Activities
24Sample Enrichment Program Activities
25Enrichment Excellence per the Rubric
- A very comprehensive description of a plan that
provides for meaningful involvement by youths in
shared leadership in the research, design,
implementation and evaluation of learning
opportunities supported by this grant. - Thoroughly demonstrates that the organization has
the experience or the promise of success in
providing education and related activities that
will complement and enhance the academic
performance, achievement, and positive youth
development of students.
26Family Literacy
- Programs must assess the need for family literacy
services among adult family members. - Family literacy services are defined as services
provided to participants on a voluntary basis
that are of sufficient intensity in terms of
hours, and of sufficient duration, to make
sustainable changes in a family, and that
integrate ALL of the suggested activities.
27Sample Family Literacy Program Activities
28Sample Family Literacy Program Activities
29Family Literacy Excellence per the Rubric
- Thoroughly describe the process used and results
of a needs assessment for family literacy
services. - Thoroughly discuss plans to refer or coordinate
with existing family literacy services.
30Program Planning Worksheet
- Use the Program Planning Worksheet as an
Organizing Tool - Questions and Answers
31Leveraging, Developing, and Documenting
Collaborative Partnerships
32No one sector can do this alone!
- Recognize differences in culture!
- Use the new resource available as seed capital
for new ventures with new partners
33Collaborative Models
- Possible Types of Participants (Examples)
- County Departments/Multiple
- Federal Government
- State Government
- Labor
- Other Local Government
- City
- Special Districts (Parks, etc.)
- Private Sector (For Profit)
- Private Sector (Nonprofit)
- Faith Based Community
34Innovative Collaboratives Get Noticed
Posted on Sat, Feb. 08, 2003 Richmond schools
get millions for after class City, school
officials teamed up to secure the grants, to be
doled out over five years to three campuses By
Rebecca Rosen Lum CONTRA COSTA TIMES RICHMOND -
Richmond schools won two of 10 grants given
statewide for after-school programs totaling 2
million, a measure of success for Mayor Irma
Anderson, who teamed up with Supervisor John
Gioia, schools officials and the nonprofit Bay
Area Partnership to seek money for her "Kids
First" effort. Kennedy and Richmond high schools
and Lovonya DeJean Middle School will receive the
grants over five years.
35Displaying Collaborative Partnerships -- Tables
36Displaying Collaborative Partnerships -- Table
Linking to Goals/Objectives
37Beyond cash.how partnerships build strong
programs
- Expertise
- Access to core funding sources
- Breaking barriersaccessing multiple kinds of
resources
38Documenting the Relationship
- Letters of Support, Letters of Commitment,
Memoranda of Understanding - Which of these is a legally binding document?
- Letter of Support Statement of endorsement
- Letter of Commitment An intent to invest or
participate - Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) Statement of
Partnership - Only the MOU is acceptable for the 21st CCLC
39Key Components of the MOU
- Preamble - What is this initiatives purpose,
goals, and key objectives? - Responsibilities of the Lead Agent (can be same
for all MOUs) - Specific responsibilities for the other party to
the MOU - Original signatures
40Developing MOUs
- Not for contracted partnersonly the portion of
the service provided that is not paid for should
be in the MOU. - Dont forget the Competitive Priority MOU if you
qualify. - All LEAs must have an MOU.
- Develop the Lead Agency block together.
- Circulate or make accessible to all the MOUs from
all partners. - Start Now!
- Check early to see if any partners have long
approval processes.
41Collaborative Partnerships
- Program Planning Worksheet.
- Questions and Answers.
42Lunch!
43Continuous Learning Through Formative Summative
Evaluation
44What is Evaluation?
- The systematic collection of information about
the activities, characteristics, and/or outcomes
of programs to make judgments about the program,
improve program effectiveness, and/or inform
decisions about future programming. - Michael Quinn Patton, Utilization-Focused
Evaluation
45Types of Evaluation
- What is formative evaluation why is it
important? - What is a summative evaluation why is it
important? - "When the cook tastes the soup, thats formative
- when the guests taste the soup, thats
summative." - Robert Stakes
46Types of Evaluation
- What do formative and summative evaluation have
to do with proposal development? - What is the difference between local and
statewide evaluation?
47Designing the Evaluation (4 Questions)
- WHAT do we want to know about the program? e.g.,
list five things that youd like to know, things
you arent certain about, that would make a
difference in the operation of your program. - WHO has this information? e.g., schools,
districts, staff, other agencies. - WHEN will information be collected? e.g., when
entering program, completion of program, from
who? - HOW can we get the information? e.g., surveys,
interviews, observation, focus groups.
48Designing the Evaluation(4 Considerations in
Methodology)
- Include multiple times of measurement
- Measure more people, more often, over a longer
time - Use a multi-method approach
- Use more than one source of information to
measure (or track) the same thing - Use comparison groups or conditions
- Compare results before and after the program or
key factor your are testing (pre/post-test
design) - Compare results from your program with results
from similar programs - Address confounds in measurement
- Measure things that are likely to also influence
your target outcomes (besides your intervention) - Ask What else may have contributed to producing
or preventing the effects?
49Demonstrating Impact
- How to demonstrate impact?
- Changed behavior
- Reduced negative behaviors (e.g. discipline
contacts) - Reduced number of school suspensions
- Better in-school behavior (as rated by teachers)
- Decrease in school absences
- Aspirations for higher education
- Greater feeling of belonging in after-school
program, school, and/or community
50Demonstrating Impact
- How to demonstrate impact?
- Improved academic performance
- Improved homework completion or quality
- Improved STAR test scores
- Reductions in grade retentions
- Decreased dropout rate
51Capacity for Effective Evaluation
- Constructing a plan to acquire and report all
required evaluation data to CDE. - Selecting the program focus measure(s) by which
program effectiveness will be measured. - Describing methods that will be used for
conducting a rigorous evaluation of programs
effectiveness at the local level.
52Capacity for Effective Evaluation
- Using local and state evaluation data to refine,
improve, and strengthen the program. - Community dissemination of the local evaluation
report. - Discussing interim results with stakeholder and
partners for continuous program improvement.
53Evaluation Design
- Use the program planning tool to practice
developing measures.
54Tying It All Together
55Planning!
- I get up every morning determined to both change
the world and have one hell of a good time.
Sometimes this makes planning my day difficult. - -- E. B. White
56Develop a Proposal Development Timeline
- Gantt charts make it possible for the whole team
to know who is accountable for what. - Stages
- Partnership Development
- Assessment
- Concept Paper
- Draft 1
- Draft 2
- Signatures
- Submission (yes!)
57Five Essential Items To Look At Immediately
- Determine your Collaborative Partners -- start
meeting and determining strategies and roles. - If you are not an LEA, talk to a decision-maker
at your LEA. - Determine and start implementing your assessment
strategy. - Establish how to post your public notice.
- Execute a private school consultation.
58Narrative Development Techniques
- Create an outline FIRST.
- Check the outline based on the RFA.
- Inform/modify the outline with the rubric.
- Pull together all data based on the outline.
- Start writing!
- Share your writing for feedback
- It is not the writing but the rewriting that
creates good product.
59Outline Using the Suggested Rubric Format
- Narrative Components (with maximum points)
- Programmatic Elements (8 Points)
- Collaboration and Partnerships (4 Points)
- Program Administration (4 Points)
- Capacity for Effective Evaluation (4 Points)
- Per Student Cost Justification (4) -ASSETs only
- Program Grant Budget (1 Page)
- Core Grant Budget Narrative/Justification (2
Pages) - Allocate pages by points
60Optional Grants
- Dont put it off until the end
- Dont count on your core narrative to carry the
day (but use each narrative strategically!) - These will be very competitive!
61A budget conversation
62Use the Budget Process as a Tool with Your
Proposal Teams
- Introduce the budget early and often.
- Tips
- In Concept Paper Stage --- Include a Conceptual
Budget - Establish a Budget Task Force --- Get key players
involved. - Provide team members with worksheets.
63Use the Budget Process as a Tool with Your
Proposal Teams
- More Tips
- Continue to include a draft budget at every
phase. - Use the budgeting process as a Team Builder not a
Team Buster. - Encourage all players to be open about their
needs. - Realize that in collaborative partnerships the
level of organizational development (and budget
needs of partners) will vary greatly.
64Tying it All Together
65Workshop Closing and Evaluation
66Evaluation