Abbie Lieberman
Senior Policy Analyst, Early & Elementary Education
Early learning has been one of the Obama administration鈥檚 strongest education initiatives in the President鈥檚 second term, and the Education Department鈥檚 recently proposed changes to the School Improvement Grants (SIG) program appear to reinforce this commitment. The SIG program, which received a makeover and funding boost under the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, aims to fix the nation鈥檚 lowest-performing schools through a variety of turnaround models. ( an overview of the four turnaround models that grantees have been able to choose from in the past.)
While it鈥檚 premature to determine the program鈥檚 success, the results have been thus far. Of the approximately 1,500 schools that have received SIG funds since 2009, only two-thirds have seen an increase in student achievement. This isn鈥檛 surprising given that many of these schools are implementing sweeping reforms in a short time frame, but it does suggest there is room for improvement. Thus, the federal government decided to update the program earlier this year. And according to the , the proposed changes 鈥渞eflect lessons learned from four years of SIG implementation.鈥 The new rules offer grantees greater flexibility, no longer limit them to the four strict turnaround models, and provide clearer guidance on areas that posed problems in the past.
Under the proposed regulations, local education agencies (LEAs) would be able to use SIG funds to implement an Early Learning Intervention Model. This would require districts to implement the following strategies: offer full-day kindergarten (The proposed guidance, however, does not offer a definition for 鈥渇ull-day鈥 and as , states have diverse interpretations.); establish or expand a high-quality pre-K program as defined in the program; and provide teachers at all levels with time for joint planning across grades so that they can 鈥渇acilitate effective teaching and learning and positive teacher-student interactions.鈥
Additionally, LEAs would need to enact other reforms required under the existing transformation model, including implementing teacher evaluation systems, rewarding teachers who improve student outcomes, replacing the principal, and employing job-embedded professional development.
Here at the Early Education Initiative, we are pleased to see that the proposed changes include a new focus on pre-K and the early elementary grades. In our recent paper, , my colleagues emphasize the importance of teaching and learning and the interactions between adults and children. They explain that interactions are 鈥渁 critical component of learning,鈥 and both skilled teachers and sufficient time in the classroom are necessary for such interactions to occur. Access to high-quality pre-K and kindergarten allows children to establish a strong educational foundation and enter the early grades on track to succeed. Pre-K and kindergarten matter, but they cannot stand alone. They are part of the larger elementary school continuum, and the proposed requirement for joint planning and coordination across grades acknowledges this.
The Department鈥檚 recommendations also resemble those presented at our event last year, where we brought school turnaround and early education leaders together to discuss how SIG could better meet the needs of early learners. Early education has been somewhat overlooked in turnaround discussions–under the old regulations, only one of the four models gave grantees the option of using the funds for early childhood education. This was a missed opportunity because focusing on school quality early on can limit the need for intervention in later grades.
The new SIG regulations include other promising changes that aren鈥檛 directly related to early education. For instance, the Department wants to extend the grant period from three to five years. SIG grantees are asked to make sizable changes, so more time to plan and implement reforms could help ensure their sustainability. The full proposal is in the .
When turning around the nation鈥檚 lowest performing schools, early learning needs to be part of the conversation because of its potential to influence children鈥檚 trajectories. The proposed SIG regulations are up for until October 8, 2014.