96-21154. Title I Migrant Education Coordination Program  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 162 (Tuesday, August 20, 1996)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 43122-43125]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-21154]
    
    
    
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    Part II
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Education
    
    
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    Title I Migrant Education Coordination Program; Notice
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 61, No. 162 / Tuesday, August 20, 1996 / 
    Notices
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
    
    
    Title I Migrant Education Coordination Program
    
    AGENCY: Department of Education.
    
    ACTION: Notice of proposed priority for fiscal year 1996.
    
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    SUMMARY: Under the authority of section 1308(a) of Part C of Title I of 
    the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), as amended, the 
    Secretary proposes an absolute priority for Fiscal Year 1996. Under the 
    proposed priority, the Secretary would support projects that use 
    electronic technologies to strengthen the academic achievement of 
    migrant students who move between school districts.
    
    DATES: Comments must be received on or before October 4, 1996.
    
    ADDRESSES: All comments concerning this proposed priority should be 
    addressed to Kristin Gilbert, Office of Migrant Education, U.S. 
    Department of Education, room 4100 Portals Building, 600 Independence 
    Avenue, SW, Washington, DC 20202-6140. Comments may also be sent by e-
    mail to kristin_gilbert@ed.gov or by FAX at (202) 260-1357.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kristin Gilbert, Office of Migrant 
    Education, U.S. Department of Education, 4100 Portals Building, 600 
    Independence Avenue, SW, Washington, DC 20202-6140. Telephone: 
    (202)260-1357. Individuals who use a telecommunications device for the 
    deaf (TDD) may call the Federal Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 1-
    800-877-8339 between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This notice contains a proposed absolute 
    priority for applications that propose to use innovative technologies 
    to improve teaching and learning for migrant students who move from one 
    school district to another. Electronic technologies include, but are 
    not limited to, digital audio, video and imaging, hypertext and 
    hypermedia, video-conferencing, speech processing, the Internet, and 
    World Wide Web sites. These technologies must be used in such a way as 
    to enable teachers to draw on newly accessible resources to engage 
    migrant students in enriched active learning environments, while at the 
    same time promoting continuity in the education programs of migrant 
    students as they move within and between States.
        The MEP is authorized in Title I, Part C, of the ESEA. Under this 
    program, the Secretary makes grants to SEAs to help ensure that migrant 
    children have the opportunity to meet the same challenging State 
    content and student performance standards that all children are 
    expected to meet. Migrant children may be served from birth through age 
    21, or through high school graduation, whichever comes first. A range 
    of services are provided through the MEP, including those that address 
    educational disruption, cultural and language barriers, social 
    isolation, various health-related problems, and other factors that 
    inhibit the ability of children to do well in school and prepare them 
    to make successful transitions to postsecondary education or 
    employment.
        Section 1308 of the ESEA authorizes the Secretary to reserve a 
    portion of each year's MEP appropriation and, in consultation with the 
    States, make grants for programs to improve the coordination of 
    services to migrant students when they move within and between States.
        While under 1308(a) of ESEA any public or private nonprofit entity 
    is eligible to apply, the Secretary will specifically invite the 
    following entities to submit applications: State educational agencies 
    (SEAs) that administer Migrant Education Programs (MEP); local 
    educational agencies (LEAs) that have a high percentage or high number 
    of migrant students; and non-profit community-based organizations that 
    work with migrant families. In order to help ensure coordination 
    between school districts, applicants would need to apply as part of a 
    consortium made up of at least two entities described in the preceding 
    sentence. The consortium must also include entities such as businesses, 
    academic content experts or software designers to help ensure broad 
    community and technical support.
        The Secretary expects that approximately $3 million will be 
    available under the MEP for this competition. Grants will range from 
    $200,000 to $600,000 per year and may be funded for up to 5 years.
        In February 1995, the Office of Migrant Education (OME) sponsored a 
    forum for all State Directors of Migrant Education to showcase and 
    discuss how electronic technologies are being used in the migrant 
    program. At the February meeting and in subsequent communications, 
    State Directors expressed support for using funds reserved by the 
    Secretary for interstate coordination activities to fund the 
    development and innovative use of technology within the migrant 
    community, particularly for those students and their families who 
    experience educational disruption as a result of repeated moves.
        Many State Directors and other educators of migrant youth are 
    actively incorporating electronic technologies into the designs of 
    programs that provide services to migrant youth. For example,
         The Summer Migrant Access Resources through Technology 
    project (Project SMART), initiated by the Texas Education Agency in 
    1992, uses television to offer instructional continuity when migrant 
    students move within Texas and to other States. Approximately 20 States 
    participate in this program.
         The Migrant Instructional Network for Telecommunications 
    Project, initiated in 1994 by the Kern County, California 
    Superintendent of Schools, develops and produces live interactive 
    instructional broadcasts for migrant students, teachers, and parents. 
    Students interact via satellite with instructors in a distant studio, 
    and programs are broadcasted using a bilingual format.
        These examples illustrate a few innovative ways that technologies 
    are being employed in migrant communities to improve teaching and 
    learning. They can inform subsequent efforts to successfully utilize 
    technologies in programs that build educational continuity for highly 
    mobile students.
        The Secretary believes that technology, if applied thoughtfully, 
    can be the catalyst that reinforces and extends migrant students' 
    learning opportunities, motivation, and achievement. Technology can 
    remove the barriers of time and place for migrant students moving 
    across the country, and provide affordable access to high-quality 
    learning. Technology may stimulate creative ways to construct rich, 
    cohesive education programs that counter the adverse impact of frequent 
    moves on the education of migrant students. Technology may help to 
    forge stronger ties between home and school, particularly when ``home'' 
    is not found in a single geographic locale, but in many.
        This proposed priority is intended to stimulate creative thinking 
    about how to integrate technology more effectively to provide high-
    quality education that meets the special needs of the migrant 
    community. The competition is intended to encourage change by helping 
    communities of educators, parents, industry partners and others to work 
    together to utilize technologies to improve the learning opportunities 
    and the curriculum available to migrant students. It is intended to 
    stimulate new
    
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    partnerships between educators and software developers, 
    telecommunications firms and hardware manufacturers, entertainment 
    producers, and others who are in the process of creating exciting new 
    possibilities for extending learning communities beyond the traditional 
    classroom boundaries.
    
    Goals 2000: Education America Act
    
        The Goals 2000: Education 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 expand the Department's 
    capacities for helping communities to exchange ideas and obtain 
    information needed to achieve these Goals.
        This proposed priority and these proposed selection criteria would 
    address the National Education Goals that all students will leave 
    grades 4, 8, and 12 having demonstrated competency over challenging 
    subject matter, and that by the year 2000 the high school graduation 
    rate will increase to at least 90 percent. The proposed priority and 
    selection criteria would further the objectives of these Goals by 
    focusing available funds on projects that will provide students, while 
    they migrate between school districts, a richer learning environment 
    and continuity of education through the use of innovative technologies.
        The Secretary will announce the final priority in a notice in the 
    Federal Register. The final priority will be determined by responses to 
    this notice and available funds. Funding of particular projects depends 
    on the availability of funds, the nature of the final priority and the 
    quality of the applications received. The publication of this proposed 
    priority and proposed selection criteria does not preclude the 
    Secretary from proposing additional priorities and selection criteria, 
    nor does it limit the Secretary to funding only this priority, subject 
    to meeting applicable rulemaking requirements.
    
        Note: This notice does not solicit applications. A notice 
    inviting applications under this competition will be published in 
    the Federal Register concurrent with or following publication of the 
    final PRIORITY.
    
        Priority: Under 34 CFR 75.105(c)(3), the Secretary proposes to give 
    an absolute preference to applications that meet the following 
    priority. The Secretary proposes to fund under this competition only 
    applications that meet this priority:
    
    Technology Applications for Teaching and Learning in the Migrant 
    Community
    
        Under this priority, an eligible entity would compete for a grant, 
    on behalf of a consortium, to cover the costs of developing, adapting 
    or expanding existing and new applications of technology to improve the 
    coordination of teaching and learning for migrant students who move 
    within and between States. Consortium efforts should be carefully 
    designed to encourage--wherever possible--the ongoing involvement of 
    educators and parents, business and civic leaders, community 
    organizations and others committed to providing enhanced educational 
    opportunity for highly mobile migrant students.
        Partners in a consortium would be expected to make monetary or in-
    kind contributions for equipment, technical support, and/or any other 
    costs that may be associated with the project. Funds awarded through 
    these grants would augment those investments by supporting, for 
    example, the development of new curriculum content, professional 
    development, or the evaluation of educational effectiveness.
        In addition to the contributions of its consortium partners, 
    applicants are encouraged to consider a range of other sources of 
    technical or financial support. Possibilities include programs 
    administered by the Department, such as: the Goals 2000: Educate 
    America Act; Title I, Part A of the Elementary and Secondary Education 
    Act; the Eisenhower Professional Development program; Bilingual 
    Education programs; School-to-Work Opportunities; the Star Schools 
    program; the Challenge Grants for Technology in Education; the Office 
    of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services technology programs; 
    the recently created Regional Technology Consortia; the regional 
    Educational Laboratories; and the Migrant Education Program itself.
        Additional sources of support might also include Foundation grants, 
    philanthropic contributions, and services provided through grants or 
    contracts from other government agencies. For example, the U.S. 
    Department of Commerce has provided grants to help develop the 
    telecommunications and information infrastructure. The National Science 
    Foundation (NSF) conducts several programs to support the use of 
    technology in mathematics and science education. The National 
    Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) supports programs to 
    improve the use of space science data in the classroom. The U.S. 
    Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) is providing funding 
    to support ``Communities of Learners'' in public housing. The 
    Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is interested in 
    carefully conceived demonstrations of new technologies in Head Start 
    and pre-school settings. Some of these programs may be able to 
    contribute to or enhance interstate or intrastate coordination projects 
    that apply technology to teaching and learning for migrant students.
    
    Application Contents
    
        Objectives: Applicants would be required to show how they would use 
    innovative technologies to achieve the following objectives: (a) to 
    promote greater continuity of instruction when migrant students move 
    within or between States; and (b) to help migrant students achieve to 
    high academic standards.
        Required Elements: At a minimum, each project would have to provide 
    the following--
        1. Adequate access to technology for all participating migrant 
    students and staff (including their families, when appropriate);
        2. Sufficient time and opportunity for teachers (and other 
    educational support staff) to learn to use technology and to 
    incorporate it into their own curricular goals;
        3. Easily accessible technical support, such as on-site assistance; 
    and
        4. An evaluation of the project that includes a strategy for 
    disseminating a successful project to other migrant programs.
    
    Selection Criteria
    
        The Secretary would use two criteria to select applications for 
    funding: significance and feasibility; i.e., is it important, and can 
    it be done?
        Significance would be determined by the extent to which the 
    project: 1. Offers a creative vision for using technology to help 
    migrant students who move within or between States learn challenging 
    academic content and to improve the coordination of their teaching and 
    learning when they move.
        2. Is likely to achieve far-reaching impact through results, 
    products, or benefits that can be readily achieved, exported or adapted 
    to other migrant communities or to settings of other mobile 
    populations.
        3. Will enhance interstate or intrastate coordination of teaching 
    and learning (that takes into consideration the cultural and language 
    characteristics of the migrant population) by integrating
    
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    acquired technologies into the curriculum.
        4. Will ensure ongoing, intensive professional development for 
    teachers (and other personnel) working with the migrant population to 
    further the learning of migrant students through the use of technology 
    in the classroom, library, home, or other learning environment.
        5. Is designed to serve highly mobile migrant populations that are 
    likely to benefit the most from educational technology applications.
        6. Is designed to create new learning communities, and expanded 
    markets for high-quality educational technology applications and 
    services for migrant and other similar populations.
        Feasibility would be determined by the extent to which--
        1. The project will ensure successful, effective, and efficient 
    uses of technologies for interstate and intrastate coordination of 
    teaching and learning for migrant students and staff that will be 
    sustainable beyond the period of the grant;
        2. The members of the consortium or other appropriate entities will 
    contribute substantial financial or other resources or both to achieve 
    the goals of the project; and
        3. The applicant is capable of carrying out the project, as 
    evidenced by the extent to which the project is likely to meet the 
    needs that have been identified; the quality of the project design, 
    including objectives, approaches, evaluation plan, and dissemination 
    plan; the adequacy of resources, including money, personnel, 
    facilities, equipment, and supplies; the qualifications of key 
    personnel who would conduct the project; and the applicant's prior 
    experience relevant to the objectives of the project.
    
    Selection Procedures
    
        The Secretary would consider only applications that establish the 
    likelihood that the proposed projects will meet the objectives and 
    include the required elements that are described within the section, 
    ``application contents.'' The Secretary proposes to evaluate 
    applications using unweighted selection criteria. In determining 
    whether applicants have met these criteria, the Secretary believes that 
    the use of unweighted criteria is most appropriate because they will 
    allow the reviewers maximum flexibility to apply their professional 
    judgments in identifying the particular strengths and weaknesses in 
    individual applications. Therefore, the Secretary proposes not to apply 
    the selection procedures in EDGAR, 34 CFR 75.217, which require a rank 
    order to be established based on weighted selection criteria.
        In accordance with 34 CFR 75.109(b), an applicant is permitted to 
    make changes to an application on or before the deadline date for 
    submission of applications. Also, in accordance with 34 CFR 75.231 the 
    Secretary may request an applicant to submit additional information 
    after the application has been selected for funding. Given the 
    technical nature of the proposals, the Secretary expects that it might 
    be necessary to obtain clarifications and additional information from 
    applicants during the selection process. Therefore, for the purpose of 
    this grant competition, the Secretary proposes also to permit an 
    applicant to submit additional information in response to a request 
    from the Secretary, during the application selection process, before 
    applicants have been selected for funding.
        The Secretary proposes to use the following selection procedures 
    for the fiscal year 1996 competition:
        In applying the selection criteria, the first peer review panel or 
    panels of experts would analyze each application in terms of the two 
    selection criteria: significance and feasibility. A reviewer would 
    assign to each application two separate qualitative ratings based on 
    the extent to which the application has met each of the two criteria, 
    taking into consideration whether the application has met the required 
    elements. The two ratings (which are of equal importance) taken 
    together would yield a composite rating, representing each reviewer's 
    total rating of each application. These reviewer ratings for each 
    application would then be combined across the reviewers in a panel to 
    yield an overall rating for each application. Each panel would also 
    identify inconsistencies, points in need of clarification, and other 
    concerns, if any, pertaining to each application.
        The Secretary would then assign each application to one of three or 
    four groups based on the panel's composite rating of each applicant. 
    Starting with the highest quality group and moving down to the lowest, 
    the Secretary would then identify the groups of applications of 
    sufficiently high quality to be considered for funding. For 
    applications in the group of sufficiently high quality applications, 
    the Secretary might request an applicant to submit additional 
    information or materials to address the concerns and questions, if any, 
    identified by the peer review panels. These requests would be strictly 
    limited to clarifications of a conceptual or technical nature, and 
    would not be meant to fill major gaps in information that reviewers 
    identify in applications.
        Depending upon the number of proposals received, a second panel 
    might be convened to reevaluate each application identified by the 
    first panel as being of sufficiently high quality, taking into account 
    any additional information or materials, to determine the extent to 
    which each application addresses the selection criteria. The Secretary 
    would then reassign each reevaluated application to one of the several 
    quality groups.
        In the final stage of the selection process, the Secretary would 
    select for funding those applications of highest quality, based on the 
    results of the second review panel and only if the Secretary is 
    satisfied that it is of high quality with regard to both significance 
    and feasibility. If in this final stage, the Secretary determines that 
    the highest quality group or groups include more applications than can 
    be funded, panelists may be asked to differentiate further between the 
    applications on the basis of quality. Awards may be continued in 
    subsequent years, subject to the availability of appropriations and 
    subject to the quality of the emerging designs.
        The Secretary might modify the two-tiered procedures, depending 
    upon the number of applications received.
        Intergovernmental Review: This program is subject to the 
    requirements of Executive Order 12372 and the regulations in 34 CFR 
    Part 79. The objective of the Executive order is to foster an 
    intergovernmental partnership and a strengthened federalism by relying 
    on processes developed by State and local governments for coordination 
    and review of proposed Federal financial assistance.
        In accordance with the order, this document is intended to provide 
    early notification of the Department's specific plans and actions for 
    this program.
        Invitation to Comment: Interested persons are invited to submit 
    comments and recommendations regarding this proposed priority.
        All comments submitted in response to this notice will be available 
    for public inspection, during and after the comment period, in Room 
    4100 Portals, 1250 Maryland Avenue, SW., Washington, D.C., between the 
    hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., Monday through Friday of each week 
    except Federal holidays.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
    
        This proposed priority and these proposed selection criteria 
    contain information collection requirements. As required by the 
    Paperwork Reduction
    
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    Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507(d), the Department of Education has 
    submitted a copy of this notice to the Office of Management and Budget 
    (OMB) for its review.
        Collection of Information: Title I Migrant Education Coordination 
    Program.
        SEAs that administer the MEP, LEAs that have a high percentage or 
    high number of migrant students, and non-profit community-based 
    organizations that work with migrant families are eligible to apply for 
    grants under this priority as part of a consortium that also includes 
    entities such as businesses, academic content experts, or software 
    designers. The information to be collected includes a description of 
    each proposed project, including specific information on the access to 
    technology for participating migrant students and their families; the 
    professional development that teachers and other educational support 
    staff will receive in the use of technologies; accessible technical 
    support and on-site assistance; and project evaluation including a 
    dissemination strategy. The Department will use the information to 
    select, on the basis on project significance and feasibility, the 
    highest-quality applications.
        All information is to be collected and reported once, as part of 
    the application for assistance. Annual reporting and recordkeeping 
    burden for this collection of information is estimated to average 80 
    hours for each response for 45 respondents, including the time for 
    reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources, gathering and 
    maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing the 
    collection of information. Thus, the total annual reporting and 
    recordkeeping burden for this collection is estimated to be 3600 hours.
        Organizations and individuals desiring to submit comments on the 
    information collection requirements should direct them to the Office of 
    Information and Regulatory Affairs, OMB, Room 10235, New Executive 
    Office Building, Washington, D.C. 20503; Attention: Desk Officer for 
    the U.S. Department of Education. Interested persons are also invited 
    to comment on the implications for public reporting in connection with 
    the use of the selection criteria proposed under this notice.
        The Department considers comments by the public on these 
    collections of information in--
         Evaluating whether the proposed collections of information 
    are necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the 
    Department, including whether the information will have practical 
    utility;
         Evaluating the accuracy of the Department's estimate of 
    the burden of the proposed collections of information, including the 
    validity of the methodology and assumptions used;
         Enhancing the quality, usefulness, and clarity of the 
    information to be collected; and
         Minimizing the burden of the collection of information on 
    those who are to respond, including through the use of appropriate 
    automated, electronic, mechanical, or other technological collection 
    techniques or other forms of information technology; e.g., permitting 
    electronic submission of responses.
        OMB is required to make a decision concerning the collections of 
    information contained in these proposed regulations between 30 and 60 
    days after publication of this document in the Federal Register. 
    Therefore, a comment to OMB is best assured of having its full effect 
    if OMB receives it within 30 days of publication. This does not affect 
    the deadline for the public to comment to the Department on the 
    proposed regulations.
        Applicable Program Regulations 34 CFR 200.49.
    
        Program Authority: 20 U.S.C. 6391(a).
    
        Dated: August 13, 1996.
    Gerald N. Tirozzi
    Assistant Secretary, Office of Elementary and Secondary Education.
    [FR Doc. 96-21154 Filed 8-19-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4000-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
08/20/1996
Department:
Education Department
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of proposed priority for fiscal year 1996.
Document Number:
96-21154
Dates:
Comments must be received on or before October 4, 1996.
Pages:
43122-43125 (4 pages)
PDF File:
96-21154.pdf