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Davenport
schools benefit from Title I dollars in the
following ways:
- Improving student achievement
- Enhances family involvement
- Provides staff development
- Provides supplies and materials
Title I Contacts
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Betty Long |
Director of Federal Programs |
563-336-5043 |
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Jillian Townsell |
Title I Specialist |
563-336-5018 |
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Heather Harland |
Budget Specialist |
563-336-3850 |
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Brenda De La Cruz |
Administrative Assistant |
563-336-3839 |
Parent Choice
Title I services are funded with federal
dollars. The legislation that defines the
rules and regulations has several different
names but the most common term is “No Child
Left Behind (NCLB). If your student is
attending a Title I school and it does not
meet Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) as
defined by the Iowa Department of Education,
the school is placed on improvement status (SINA-School
in Need of Assistance).
When this designation is confirmed, the
district must notify every family with
children at that school explaining their
right to Parent Choice. A letter is sent to
each family with details about the
improvement status , a list of schools
available for choice transfer, and a form
parents are to fill out and return to
Central Office. Staff at the Central Office
work with the Transportation Department to
be sure a schedule is developed in a timely
fashion.
Supplemental Educational Services -
Otherwise known as Free Tutoring
2011-2012
When a Title I schools does not meet
Adequate Yearly Progress AYP) for three
years, the school district must arrange for
the provision of Supplemental Educational
Services for eligible students who attend
that school. The supplemental instruction
must be provided outside the regular school
day. The services must be (high quality and
research based) specifically designed to
help students meet the academic achievement
standards.
The district must provide the eligible
families with a
list of State approved
providers. The list should include a
wide variety of providers and several
different ways to provide the services.
Currently the State of Iowa has approved 41
vendors. 21 of the 41 vendors excluded
Davenport students in their description as
service. Following registration, an
additional 5 vendors withdrew from the
service provider list. That leaves 15
vendors participating in the provision of
services for Davenport Title I students. You
will notice when you review the list that
service options include on line instruction,
tutoring in the community/home and tutoring
in our school locations. Currently, 8
vendors are providing services for Davenport
students. The list of approved vendors
begins on the next page.
The approved expense for each student is
$1299.00 for the current school year.
Information has been available via direct
mailing and public locations (Public Library
and the YMCA).
Two enrollment dates for this year include
August 3rd-September 9th (extended one week)
and anytime after September 9th –December
9th.
Priority is given to students on free lunch,
then reduced lunch, and then paid lunch
status.
How Does My Building Become a Title I
Funded Site
Title I (in the past also known as Chapter
I) is a significant piece of President
Lyndon Johnson’s “Great Society” and a part
of the Elementary and Secondary Education
Act of 1965. The intended purpose: focus
additional federal dollars on high poverty
areas with the outcome being improved
student achievement.
Dollars are allocated to Title I eligible
buildings based on poverty rate. For us,
this means the public schools are ranked
based on their percentage of students on
free/reduced lunch. The rank order lists
buildings from highest to lowest percentage.
To be designated as an eligible school, the
attendance area must have at least 35% of
the children enrolled from low income
families.
How Is the Title I Money Allocated to
Eligible Sites
Once the rank order is established the
process of allocating dollars begins. All
required set asides are first identified.
State and federal guidance outlines required
as well as allowable set aside categories.
The balance of dollars still available after
set asides are totaled and subtracted from
the allocation is then added to the
designated carry over dollars (money unspent
from previous budget) to create a new
balance. This balance is divided by the
total number of resident students (public
and non-public students) to create a per
pupil cost. The funding formula calls for
the per pupil cost to be multiplied by the
number of resident students in an eligible
school. Schools then receive funding based
on the order within the grade span the
district has decided to serve.
Grade span refers to the range of grades in
a school or district. The district, based on
data collected, can decide to focus funding
for specific support to specific grades (ex:
kindergarten – 3rd grade; kindergarten-5th
grade; kindergarten-8th grade; etc.) Our
district currently funds preschool as a set
aside and grades kindergarten-8th grade in
the rank order.
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2010-2011 Title I Schools: Buchanan
Elementary
Fillmore Elementary
Hayes Elementary
Madison Elementary
Monroe Elementary
Jackson Elementary
Jefferson-Edison Elementary
Lincoln Academy
Smart Intermediate
Wilson Elementary
Young Intermediate
Non Public Schools:
All Saints Catholic School
JFK Catholic School
Marquette Academy
St. Paul Catholic School |
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