99-27094. National Awards Program for Model Professional Development  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 200 (Monday, October 18, 1999)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 56248-56250]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-27094]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
    
    
    National Awards Program for Model Professional Development
    
    AGENCY: Office of Educational Research and Improvement, Department of 
    Education.
    
    ACTION: Notice of eligibility and selection criteria.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Assistant Secretary for Educational Research and 
    Improvement (Assistant Secretary) announces eligibility and selection 
    criteria to govern competitions under the National Awards Program for 
    Model Professional Development for fiscal year (FY) 2000 and future 
    years. Using these criteria, the National Awards Program will recognize 
    a variety of schools and school districts with model professional 
    development activities at the pre-kindergarten through twelfth grade 
    levels that have led to increases in student achievement.
    
    DATES: These eligibility and selection criteria are effective November 
    17, 1999.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Sharon Horn, Office of Educational 
    Research and Improvement, U.S. Department of Education, 555 New Jersey 
    Avenue, NW., room 506E, Washington, DC 20208-5644. Telephone: (202) 
    219-2203 or FAX to (202) 219-2198. Inquiries also may be sent by e-mail 
    to: sharon__horn@ed.gov If you use a telecommunications device for the 
    deaf (TDD), you may call the Federal Information Relay Service (FIRS) 
    at 1-800-877-8339.
        Individuals with disabilities may obtain this document in an 
    alternate format (e.g., Braille, large print, audiotape, or computer 
    diskette) on request to the contact person listed in the preceding 
    paragraph.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This notice announces definitions and 
    criteria to govern applications for recognition submitted under the 
    National Awards Program for Model Professional Development. This 
    Program began in 1996, in coordination with a wide range of national 
    education organizations, to highlight and recognize schools and school 
    districts whose professional development activities are well aligned 
    with the statement of the Mission and Principles of Professional 
    Development that the Department developed in 1995.
        The public has expressed great interest in this program. In the 
    first three years of the program, the Department received nearly 300 
    applications for national recognition. The Secretary has recognized 20 
    schools and school districts in 12 states--Arizona, California, 
    Colorado, Connecticut, Georgia, Kansas, Massachusetts, New Mexico, New 
    York, Oklahoma, Texas and Washington--for the high quality of their 
    professional development activities and the link between those 
    activities and improved student learning. Moreover, the National Awards 
    Program has helped educators at all levels to learn both how teachers 
    and others in these sites have succeeded in implementing high-quality 
    professional development activities, and what educators in other 
    locations can do to better evaluate the effectiveness of their own 
    professional development efforts.
        The importance of encouraging even more schools and school 
    districts to implement high-quality professional development that is 
    tied to increased student achievement, and having even greater numbers 
    of exemplary sites as models for others, demands that this awards 
    program be continued.
        On July 28, 1999, the Assistant Secretary published a Notice of
    
    [[Page 56249]]
    
    Proposed Eligibility and Selection Criteria for this program in the 
    Federal Register (64 FR 40856-58). This notice proposed to continue the 
    eligibility and selection criteria that the Department announced in the 
    Federal Register on October 30, 1997 (62 FR 58870-73) with the 
    following exceptions:
         To meet criterion D, which requires applicants to 
    demonstrate the link between their professional development activities 
    and increased student achievement, applicants would need to present 
    data on student achievement using multiple measures that cover a period 
    of three years or more.
         If a school and a school district that served that school 
    both submitted applications under the National Awards program, the 
    Department only would consider the school district's application.
         All applicants would need to certify that they have no 
    outstanding violations of the Individuals With Disabilities Education 
    Act (IDEA) in a Department monitoring report or, if findings do exist, 
    that the findings either have been corrected or are part of an 
    agreement for corrective action.
        There are no differences between the final eligibility and 
    selection criteria for this program, and those proposed in the July 28, 
    1999 notice.
    
        Note: This notice does not solicit applications. A notice 
    inviting applications under this competition is published elsewhere 
    in this edition of the Federal Register.
    
    Analysis of Comments and Changes
    
        In response to the Assistant Secretary's invitation in the notice 
    of proposed eligibility and selection criteria, two parties submitted 
    comments. An analysis of the comments follows.
        Comment: One commenter noted that applicants may have difficulty 
    meeting the proposed criterion that they use data from multiple 
    measures and over three or more years to demonstrate the link between 
    their professional development activities and increased student 
    achievement. The commenter observed that school districts are still in 
    the process of aligning their assessment systems with State content and 
    performance standards in core subjects. Therefore, it will be difficult 
    for school districts to provide the kind of longitudinal assessment 
    data over a period of three years or more that the commenter believes 
    the selection criteria require.
        Discussion: We recognize that few schools and school districts are 
    able now to generate three or more years of data on student achievement 
    through new assessment measures that are aligned with State content and 
    student performance standards. Most States only very recently have 
    developed their State content and student performance standards, and 
    curriculum and teaching methods that complement them need to be in 
    place before these new assessment methods can be properly used.
        Where school districts do use these newly aligned assessments as 
    measures of student achievement, the data they generate are available 
    to the districts for presentation in their National Awards Program 
    applications. However, because these student assessment measures are so 
    new, we agree that most school districts cannot be expected to use them 
    as the source of their multiyear data on student achievement. The 
    proposed selection criteria simply require applicants to describe both 
    their professional development activities and how the measures they 
    have used and relied upon during a period of three years or more 
    demonstrate that the achievement level of their students has increased.
        We do not believe that any change in the selection criteria is 
    needed. However the program application packet has been revised to 
    clarify that in establishing the link between their professional 
    development activities and increased student achievement, applicants 
    are expected to describe whatever data sources they have relied upon 
    during this multi-year period to measure student achievement.
        Changes: None.
        Comment: One commenter stressed (1) the special circumstances of 
    schools with small, rural underserved populations including those that 
    serve Indian students, and (2) these schools' resource limitations and 
    relative inexperience in grant writing. The commenter recommended that 
    the criteria for the National Awards Program permit applications from 
    Native American schools, charter schools, and rural schools to be 
    separated from those from other schools.
        Discussion: We are aware of the significant challenges faced by 
    many schools in rural areas, including those that serve Indian 
    students. However, for all students in the nation to achieve to their 
    potential, the Principles of Professional Development that the 
    Department developed in collaboration with the education and research 
    communities must be the same for all schools and school districts 
    regardless of their circumstances or geographic location. Similarly, 
    the criteria under which any school or school district would be 
    recognized for how well it has aligned its professional development 
    activities with those principles--the basis for recognition under the 
    National Awards Program--must be the same for all applicants.
        We have worked to implement procedures that can ensure that those 
    selected for national recognition earn this recognition because of the 
    quality of their professional development activities rather than the 
    quality of their grant writing. The key to a successful application is 
    specific information that demonstrates that a school's or school 
    district's professional development activities are aligned with each of 
    the research-based Principles of Professional Development. The 
    Department developed this statement of principles in 1995 in 
    collaboration with the education community, and they are included in 
    the application packet. The program selection criteria and application 
    instructions have been crafted so that those classroom teachers and 
    others most familiar with a school or district's professional 
    development activities can prepare the application. Moreover, teams of 
    experts conduct on-site examinations of many applicants to ensure that 
    those whom the Secretary would recognize under the National Awards 
    Program earn this recognition because of the work of their teachers, 
    school leaders, and other staff, and not because of the quality of 
    their written applications.
        Since the program's inception, the Secretary has recognized urban 
    and rural schools and school districts throughout the nation--including 
    an Indian school in Arizona. (Profiles of this and other past 
    recipients of recognition under the National Awards Program are 
    available through the Internet at http://www.ed.gov/inits/teachers/
    research.html.) We are confident that this fact validates our 
    insistence that all schools and school districts that seek recognition 
    under the National Awards Program meet the same high standards for the 
    quality of their professional development activities.
        Changes: None.
        Eligibility and Selection Criteria
    
    Eligible Applicants
    
        As with previous years' programs, eligible applicants are schools 
    and school districts in the States (including schools located on Indian 
    reservations, and in the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the 
    outlying areas) that provide educational programs at the pre-
    kindergarten through twelfth grade levels.
    
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    Selection Criteria
    
        For reasons stated in the July 28, 1999 Notice of Proposed 
    Eligibility and Selection Criteria, the eligibility and application 
    selection criteria and selection procedures for the FY 2000 and future 
    year competitions are the same as those published in the Federal 
    Register on October 30, 1997 (59 FR 63773), subject to the following 
    three changes:
        1. Criterion D (``Objective Evidence of Success'') includes 
    additional language requiring applicants to provide and discuss data 
    that indicate the connection between needs assessments, improvement 
    plans, professional development activities, and teacher and student 
    outcomes. In addition, in order to confirm that student achievement has 
    increased, the data that applicants provide on student achievement must 
    reflect multiple measures and cover a period of three years or more.
        2. A school that applies for national recognition must apply on its 
    own or as part of its LEA's application. A school may not apply through 
    both applications. Should the Department receive an application from a 
    school and the LEA in which the school is located, it will review only 
    the LEA's application.
        3. Those applying for National Awards Program recognition must 
    certify that there are no outstanding findings of violations of IDEA in 
    a Department monitoring report or, if findings do exist, the findings 
    either have been corrected or are subject to an agreement for 
    corrective action.
    
    Goals 2000: Educate America Act
    
        The Goals 2000: Educate America Act (Goals 2000) focuses the 
    Nation's education reform efforts on the eight National Education Goals 
    and provides a framework for meeting them. Goals 2000 promotes new 
    partnerships to strengthen schools and expands the Department's 
    capacities for helping communities to exchange ideas and obtain 
    information needed to achieve the goals.
        These eligibility and selection criteria address the National 
    Education Goal that the Nation's teaching force will have the content 
    knowledge and teaching skills needed to instruct all American students 
    for the next century.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
    
        The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 does not require you to respond 
    to a collection of information unless it displays a valid OMB control 
    number. The procedures and requirements contained in this notice relate 
    to the content of an application packet that the Department has 
    developed under the three National Awards program for Model 
    Professional Development. The public may obtain copies of these packets 
    by calling or writing the individuals identified at the beginning of 
    this notice as the Department's contact, or through the Department's 
    website: http://www.ed.gov/offices/OPE/heatqp/index.html.
        As required by the Paperwork Reduction Act, the Office of 
    Management and Budget has approved the use of these application 
    packets, and the selection criteria announced in this notice, under the 
    following OMB control number 1880-0534, which expires September 30, 
    2002.
    
    Intergovernmental Review
    
        This program is subject to Executive Order 12372 and the 
    regulations in 34 CFR Part 79. One of the objectives of the Executive 
    order is to foster an intergovernmental partnership and a strengthened 
    federalism. The Executive order relies on processes developed by State 
    and local governments for coordination and review of proposed Federal 
    financial assistance.
        This document is intended to provide early notification of our 
    specific plans and actions for this program.
    
    Electronic Access to This Document
    
        You may review this document, as well as all other Department of 
    Education documents published in the Federal Register, in text or Adobe 
    Portable Document Format (PDF) on the Internet at either of the 
    following sites:
    
    http://ocfo.ed.gov/fedreg.htm.
    http://www.ed.gov/news.html.
    
        To use the PDF you must have the Adobe Acrobat Reader Program with 
    Search, which is available free at either of the previous sites. If you 
    have questions about using the PDF, call the U.S. Government Printing 
    Office (GPO), toll free, at 1-888-293-6498; or in the Washington, D.C. 
    area, at (202) 512-1530.
    
        Note: The official version of this document is the document 
    published in the Federal Register. Free Internet access to the 
    official edition of the Federal Register and the Code of Federal 
    Regulations is available on GPO Access at:
    
    http://www.access.gpo.gov/nara/index.html.
    
        Program Authority: 20 U.S.C. 8001.
    
        Dated: October 13, 1999.
    C. Kent McGuire,
    Assistant Secretary for Educational Research and Improvement.
    [FR Doc. 99-27094 Filed 10-13-99; 3:55 pm]
    BILLING CODE 4000-01-U
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
11/17/1999
Published:
10/18/1999
Department:
Education Department
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of eligibility and selection criteria.
Document Number:
99-27094
Dates:
These eligibility and selection criteria are effective November 17, 1999.
Pages:
56248-56250 (3 pages)
PDF File:
99-27094.pdf