Empowering Schools
and Improving Learning:
A Joint
Organizational Statement on the Federal Role in Public Schooling
Vision of Public
Education
All children deserve the
opportunity to succeed in high quality public schools. High quality public
schools are schools where students and adults form active communities of
learners, evidenced by a culture that is both supportive and challenging.
They attend to the whole child and meet the individual needs and support
the strengths of each child, including English language learners, students
with disabilities, and students of diverse racial, cultural and
socioeconomic backgrounds. They are well-resourced and well-staffed by
qualified professionals, provide classes of a size that ensures
individualized instruction and attention to each child's learning needs,
and are safe, healthy and modern. Students attending these schools
demonstrate ongoing progress toward important learning outcomes as
indicated by a variety of sources and kinds of evidence, including
classroom work, different types of assessments of progress and mastery,
and grade promotion and graduation rates.
Important learning outcomes must
include basic and higher order content knowledge and thinking skills in
and across subject areas. Schools must have programs to provide all
students with a coherent and intellectually challenging curriculum that
includes 21st century critical thinking, problem solving, and
high-level communication skills, and that ensures deep understanding of
content. To achieve these outcomes, schools must be culturally sensitive
and address different learning styles and interests through curriculum and
instruction that fosters student engagement, promotes creativity, and
addresses diverse experiences and needs. Schools also will collaborate
with families and communities to meet the needs of the whole child --
cognitive/intellectual, social, civic, emotional, psychological, ethical,
and physical -- while preparing them for successful citizenship in a
multi-cultural world.
The federal government has a
limited but important role to play in realizing this vision of high
quality schooling for all. It should help provide the tools and resources
to empower schools where students are underserved by partnering with
schools, districts, states, communities, and organizations to ensure all
schools are of higher quality. To ensure successful learning outcomes, the
federal government also must take a strong role in addressing issues
complementary to education, including health care, housing, employment,
income, and community fragmentation.
Key Components of
the Federal Role
To effectively assist in
empowering schools and improving learning, the federal government must
overhaul the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA, currently
authorized as the No Child Left Behind Act, NCLB), especially Title I. The
new law should be consistent with the Joint Organizational Statement on
No Child Left Behind and this document. In particular, rather than
making accountability the central component of ESEA, the law must make
capacity-building central, with accountability as one component that
serves the improvement process. In making this change, the federal
government must provide assistance and develop guidelines, but not manage
the details of implementation, as it does under NCLB.
Major changes in the federal
role in public education are needed in three areas: empowering schools so
they can better ensure strong learning outcomes for all students;
providing more adequate and equitable resources for all students; and
developing an accountability system that focuses evaluation on students'
opportunities to learn, processes of systemic school improvement, and
student learning outcomes based on multiple forms of evidence. Adopting
these changes will reshape federal, state and local relationships. The
following are key components of the federal role in ensuring high-quality
learning outcomes for all students.
Empowerment for Improvement
1. Improvement plans and
actions: Every ESEA Title I school and district shall engage in a
planning process with the participation of school personnel, parents, and
the community the school serves. Planning will result in strategies to
provide equitable, high quality education, including implementation of the
systemic changes in school practices detailed below. Plans shall address
cultural diversity and the specific needs of any special populations, such
as English language learners, students with disabilities, and students
with gifts and talents. Schools and districts will implement the plans,
and districts will monitor plan implementation, provide support as needed,
and intervene should implementation falter. States, in turn, will monitor
school districts.
2. Collaboration:
Funds for Titles I and II shall be used to enable school-based educators,
with support from districts and the state, to work collaboratively to
improve curriculum, instructional practices, and assessments; better meet
the needs of individuals and groups of students and address barriers to
learning; and ensure the continuing professional development of all
education personnel.
3. Professional learning:
As an integral component of educational improvement and ongoing school
practice, professional development funds shall be used to meet local
educational needs through professional collaboration, mentoring, career
ladders, and appropriate professional activities and strategies to work
with families and communities. Schools may use a portion of these funds to
engage outside expertise and other agencies to assist their staff. To
adequately support professional learning, a funding stream in an amount
equal to 20% of Title I funds shall be used for this purpose, with states
providing a matching amount. State and local education agencies shall
jointly identify appropriate sources of funding and work with schools to
determine the best uses for those funds.
4. Parental and family
engagement and support: Because parental and family engagement in
schools and parental and family support of student learning at home are
vitally important to school quality and student success, a funding stream
in an amount equal to five percent of Title I funds shall be provided for
these purposes. These funds, determined jointly by state and local
education agencies in consultation with schools, shall be used to
strengthen parent involvement in schools, including translation services
and transportation and child care, so that parents can meaningfully
participate in school improvement activities. Equally, these funds must be
used to build parents' capacity to assist their children's learning
through adult literacy, English as a second language, and culturally
sensitive parenting skills programs. These funds also shall be used to
mentor students whose parents are unable to provide adequate support.
5. Assessment:
ESEA shall provide funds to enable schools, districts, and states to
develop high quality formative and summative assessments in the various
subjects, as well as other indicators to provide evidence of improved
student learning and school quality. These assessments must be based on
state standards and the local curriculum, assess higher order thinking and
other 21st century skills, and provide multiple approaches for
students to demonstrate their learning. The primary use of these
assessments is to improve instruction and enable teachers to better
address each student's strengths and needs. These funds may be used
jointly with the funds authorized for collaborative activities and
professional development in the school and school district, provided those
activities include developing assessments and indicators and improving
educators' skills in using them. Since the federal government has
previously provided substantial funds for the improvement of statewide
standardized tests, Congress should continue modest funding for those
activities, which also may include the development of tasks and projects
(performance tasks) that states, districts, and schools can use. In
addition, Congress shall provide funds for the use of universal design
principles to create large-scale and classroom-based assessments that are
appropriate for all students, including English language learners and
students with disabilities.
6. Research and
dissemination: ESEA shall increase support for research and
dissemination. Such support shall include gathering information about
successful approaches to ensuring high quality learning outcomes and
evaluating the conditions under which such programs are likely to succeed.
Information also shall be gathered about high-quality curriculum and
assessments that can be utilized locally, on a voluntary basis, and made
available on electronic networks or in print. ESEA shall create a new
national sample within the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)
or another appropriate process that will employ extended performance tasks
(including electronic variations) based on up-to-date evidence of how
individuals learn. These tasks shall be designed to indicate students'
ability to understand and apply knowledge and higher order thinking in and
across subject areas. Knowledge gained through this program shall support
development of performance tasks that may be incorporated into state,
district, and classroom assessments.
Improved Funding to Enhance
Equity and Adequacy
7. Equity and adequacy:
The goal of the federal government shall be to ensure that all children
have equitable access to a high-quality education and achieve high-quality
learning outcomes. The federal government shall substantially increase
education funding and ensure fair distribution of federal funds across the
states; enforce the requirement that states use Title I funds to
supplement, not supplant, state and local funding; ensure collection of
data that can identify, within schools and communities, any key inequities
that affect learning outcomes; and, work with states to help them move
quickly toward greater equity and adequacy of resources. Federal, state,
and local governments together must contribute to meeting this goal. While
each step poses complex issues to resolve, rapid progress toward the goal
must be achieved. It is a state responsibility to ensure that resources
adequate to produce high-quality learning outcomes for all students are
available to each school and are used appropriately. The federal
government shall conduct studies to determine the costs of providing a
high-quality education to all students.
8. Federal funding:
Through the ESEA and the appropriations process, Congress shall continue
to provide assistance by supplementing the local and state funds available
to schools and districts with concentrations of low-income and diverse
students. Congress shall fully fund ESEA Title I and the Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) Part B, in accord with current formulas,
and shall make both ESEA Title I and IDEA Part B mandatory federal budget
items. The increased mandatory allocations would more than double the
amounts now provided by these laws. The federal government shall fund a
significant portion of the cost of implementing the systemic school
improvement changes described in this document and in the Joint
Organizational Statement on NCLB. Congress also shall appropriate
substantially increased sums to better meet the needs of students served
under the other Titles and Parts of ESEA and IDEA. In addition, funding
shall be provided for school modernization programs.
9. Comprehensive indicator
systems: ESEA shall provide for the development of comprehensive
statewide indicator systems to provide evidence on such school factors as
the equitable and sufficient distribution of qualified staff, including
but not limited to teachers and supervisory staff; class size; buildings,
libraries, technology, and other material resources; school climate;
parental engagement; and family and community support for learning. Such
indicator systems will also provide evidence about learning outcomes, such
as high school graduation; college readiness, enrollment, and progress;
employment; and civic participation. In addition, the system shall collect
information on out-of-school factors including comprehensive health care,
housing, employment and income, and community safety. Collection of these
indicators will be a collaborative activity involving relevant state and
federal departments and agencies. This evidence will help improve
opportunities to learn and support school improvement efforts.
10. Opportunity to learn:
Each state shall develop strategies for providing resources to overcome
inequities and inadequacies identified by the indicators. The goal is to
provide resources sufficient to ensure every child can participate in high
quality learning experiences. Each state shall report biannually on the
indicators, strategies, and progress to the public. The federal government
shall provide a biannual report to the public as to status and progress on
these indicators across the states.
Accountability for
Improvement and Learning Outcomes
11. Information systems:
To improve schools and student learning outcomes, states shall
construct information systems that incorporate the indicators and
assessments described in this document. States may use a federally
designed model or their own. These systems will enable schools, districts,
and states to utilize information and evidence for improvement activities.
Such information also can be used for monitoring and publicly reporting on
schools.
12. Accountability for
school improvement and learning outcomes: With the primary focus
on empowering schools and improving learning, ESEA shall establish several
forms of accountability with identified consequences. Evidence on the
learning progress of all students, using multiple sources and types of
evidence in the various subjects, including district and school-based
information, must be gathered and reported on a disaggregated basis.
Equally important, data on implementation of systemic school improvement
changes (as described in preceding paragraphs), obstacles encountered and
steps taken to overcome them, outcomes, and proposed steps for further
improvement must be gathered and publicly reported. Each school will
provide an opportunity for its teachers and other staff, parents, and the
community to review, discuss, and provide advice on the reports.
13. Rate of improvement:
Evidence of a school's learning outcomes shall be evaluated in
light of expected statewide rates of improvement. The expected rates of
improvement, to be specified by a formula in ESEA, must be rooted in
actual levels and rates of improvement that are attained by the more
successful Title I schools and for which evidence indicates that these
rates can be sustained over time. Aspects of improvement can be combined
into a comprehensive indicator system with a composite expected rate of
improvement.
14. Assistance and
intervention: ESEA shall not mandate an explicit set of school or
district "governance" changes, nor shall it overturn contract provisions
for local personnel. ESEA will provide a funding stream to states in an
amount equal to two percent of Title I funds to assist districts in
systemic change. However, districts and states are responsible for
providing assistance where evidence of school quality--including the level
of learning outcomes, rate of improvement in outcomes, or success in
implementing systemic changes--demonstrate that a school needs assistance
and interventions. The nature and extent of assistance should respond to
clearly identified needs. In determining the nature and extent of
assistance, funding and resources, including teachers and administrators
as well as the instructional program, must be addressed. Should a school
be deemed chronically inadequate and unable to improve, the district and
then the state are obligated to provide additional intensive
interventions.
Conclusion
Incremental changes will not fix
NCLB's serious flaws and will not enable all students to succeed. To
ensure high-quality learning outcomes, Congress must overhaul ESEA,
particularly Title I, to empower schools to improve, focus on improved
assistance, help ensure funding equity and adequacy, redefine
accountability, and reshape the federal relationship with states and
districts.
The federal government must
provide strong leadership through supportive policies and sufficient
funding. The systemic school improvement and accountability changes
outlined in this document are interrelated changes that reinforce each
other and must be implemented together. They are not a menu from which to
pick and choose. Experience and research show that these are among the
most critical changes that states and localities can make to improve
learning. The federal government therefore must provide strong financial
support to these efforts and more broadly work to ensure all schools have
adequate resources to educate all their students well.
We therefore call on Congress
and the President to follow the guidance found in the Joint
Organizational Statement on NCLB and the initiatives described above.
[A PDF version of "Empowering"
without the list of signers is available here.]
Signers of Empowering Schools and
Improving Learning
(List of 85 signers
up to date as of 4-13-10)
-
Advancement Project
-
American Association of
Colleges for Teacher Education (AACTE)
-
American Association of School
Librarians
-
American Association of
University Women (AAUW)
-
American Counseling
Association
-
American Dance Therapy
Association
-
American Federation of School
Administrators (AFSA)
-
American Music Therapy
Association
-
American Occupational Therapy
Association
-
American School Counselor
Association
-
American
Speech-Language-Hearing Association
-
Americans for the Arts
-
Annenberg Institute for School
Reform
-
Asian American Legal Defense
and Education Fund (AALDEF)
-
Asian Pacific American Labor
Alliance (APALA)
-
Association of Community
Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN)
-
ASPIRA
-
Big
Picture Company
-
Center for Expansion of
Language and Thinking
-
Center for Parent Leadership
-
Children's Aid Society
-
Christians for Justice Action,
United Church of Christ
-
Citizens for Effective Schools
-
Coalition of Essential Schools
National
-
Coalition for Community
Schools
-
Communities for Quality
Education
-
Council for Children with
Behavioral Disorders
-
Council for Exceptional
Children
-
Council for Learning
Disabilities
-
Council of Administrators of
Special Education, Inc (CASE)
-
Disciples Center for Public
Witness
-
Disciples Home Missions of the
Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
-
Disciples Justice Action
Network (Disciples of Christ)
-
Division for Learning
Disabilities of the Council for Exceptional Children
-
Education Action!
-
Education Law Center
-
Equal Partners in Faith
-
FairTest (National Center for
Fair & Open Testing)
-
Holmes Partnership
-
Institute for Language and
Education Policy
-
International Technology
Education Association (ITEA)
-
League of United Latin
American Citizens (LULAC)
-
Learning Disabilities
Association of America (LDA)
-
Mental Health America
-
National Alliance of Black
School Educators (NABSE)
-
National Association for Asian
and Pacific American Education (NAAPAE)
-
National Association for the
Education of African American Children with Learning Disabilities
-
National Association of
Federally Impacted Schools
-
National Association of Pupil
Services Administrators (NAPSA)
-
National Association of School
Nurses
-
National Association of School
Psychologists (NASP)
-
National Association of Social
Workers
-
National Coalition for Parent
Involvement in Education (NCPIE)
-
National Coalition of ESEA
Title I Parents
-
National Council for Community
and Education Partnerships (NCCEP)
-
National Council for the
Social Studies
-
National Council of Churches
USA
-
National Council of Teachers
of English
-
National Education Association
(NEA)
-
National Education Task Force
-
National Federation of
Filipino American Associations
-
National Forum on Information
Literacy
-
National Indian Education
Association
-
National Indian School Board
Association
-
National Ministries, American
Baptist Churches USA
-
National Pacific Islander
Educator Network
-
National People's Action
-
National Science Teachers
Association
-
National Superintendents Roundtable
-
National Training &
Information Center
-
Parents for Public Schools
-
Progressive National Baptist
Convention
-
Promise the Children
-
Protestants for the Common
Good
-
Protestant Justice Action
-
Public Education Network
-
Rethinking Schools
-
Rural School and Community
Trust
-
School Social Work Association
of America
-
Sikh American Legal Defense
and Education Fund (SALDEF)
-
Southeast Asia Resource Action
Center (SEARAC)
-
United Black Christians of the
United Church of Christ
-
United Church of Christ
Coalition for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Concerns
-
United Church of Christ
Justice and Witness Ministries
-
United Methodist Church,
General Board of Church and Society
-
U.S. Action
We encourage national organizations to
sign "Empowering Schools and Improving Learning."
Email the endorsement to monty [at]
fairtest [dot] org. Send your organization's name along with contact
person and that person's email, phone and address, as well as
organization's website. By signing "Empowering," you also automatically
sign the "Joint Organizational Statement on No Child Left Behind."
We also encourage state and local
organizations to endorse and use "Empowering Schools" and the "Joint
Statement," although we are not adding such groups to the list of signers.