New Title III Grants Signal Shifting Federal Priorities for ELL Educators
Last week, President Obama signed the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) into law, replacing No Child Left Behind and . For English language learners (ELLs), Title I and Title III formula funds will still flow from Washington to localities with the aim of supporting these traditionally underserved students. But the federal government will have far less control over states鈥 academic targets for ELLs and will play a 鈥溾 role in intervening if schools fail to meet state-determined expectations.
In many ways, ESSA initiates a new era marked by the many things the federal government 肠补苍鈥檛 do (at least in terms of accountability). However, if the U.S. Department of Education now has fewer accountability sanctions to use, it鈥檚 retained one major way to incentivize the ELL policies it wants: award discretionary, Title III grant money to projects aligned to its vision.
For example, days after ESSA鈥檚 passage last week, the Department鈥檚 Office of English Language Acquisition (OELA) the next round of its Title III National Professional Development (NPD) grant competition. The office pledged to award up to $23.8 million dollars to institutions of higher education working with states and districts to develop educators and improve their classroom instruction for ELLs. Grants can support pre-service and in-service practices for teachers, administrators, paraprofessionals and other staff working with ELLs. According to the , OELA estimates issuing over 50 awards this 2016 competition cycle with an average award amount of $450,000 annually.
Incoming Secretary of Education, John King, said the 2016 NPD funding will enable the Department of Education to 鈥渢o deliver on [its] promise of equity, excellence and opportunity in supporting educators, students and families across the country.”
OELA held the last round of the NPD grant competition in and runs a new contest . Grantees can receive continued funding each year for the five-year period, on annual Congressional appropriations and grantees鈥 progress towards their goals. In the period between competition years, if funds are available, OELA can also make additional awards from the latest competition round.
How does the Department determine winners? Evaluators score proposals on a , judging the quality of project鈥檚 design, management, evaluation, and personnel. But, they also award a smaller number of additional 鈥渂onus鈥 points tied to a specific set of competitive priorities set by the Department of Education each cycle. This gives 聽the Department some discretion to steer applicants鈥 approaches for supporting ELLs.
Along with competitive priorities, the Department also includes 鈥渋nvitational鈥 priorities for NPD grants. These priorities do not give an application any additional preference or points in the competition. However, they are importantly symbolic, allowing the Department to highlight approaches they deem most promising for ELLs.
So, how do the 2016 priorities compare to those set in 2011? What does this signal about the Department鈥檚 vision for ELLs?
, the Department outlined three competitive priorities: preference to first-time applicants, projects designed with more data-based decision-making, and projects promoting science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) education. That competition featured two invitational priorities: improving high school achievement and graduation rates and improving preparation of all teachers to better serve ELLs.
identifies a different set of preferences. The first competitive priority awards points for 鈥渕oderate evidence of effectiveness,鈥 meaning that 鈥 among other criteria 鈥 there must be at least one study on the effectiveness of a proposed idea or approach that meets expectations of rigorous .
The second competitive priority focuses on improving parent, family and community engagement. This is an area receiving increasing attention from educators, researchers and government leaders in recent years. This May, emphasized the importance of a 鈥渢wo-generation approach鈥 for educating ELLs, spotlighting community school models with wraparound services and programs for family literacy development. Additionally, in August, the White House Task Force on 麻豆果冻传媒ns (WHTFNA) held a webinar to spotlight promising practices for engaging immigrant parents and families and reviewed the Department of Education鈥檚 Family and Community Engagement for all learners. The addition of family engagement as a competitive priority in the 2016 NPD grant competition builds on the growing recognition that families are a critical lever in supporting ELLs鈥 educational success. Bear in mind, however, that proposed projects cannot focus on engaging ELLs鈥 families generally; they must address this priority through professional development for educators in ways that support instruction.
In addition to the two new competitive priorities, the 2016 NPD competition also includes two invitational priorities. The first encourages the use of dual language approaches to develop students鈥 biliteracy skills. In the public notice announcing this round of the competition, the Department highlighted the , and benefits of high-quality, dual language programs and praised the potential for such programs to treat linguistic and cultural diversity as an asset.
This fits with a growing consensus among many education leaders: bilingualism and biliteracy uniquely support ELLs鈥 success. Nationwide, dual language programs have been at the and level, though bilingual teacher shortages severely limit its replication and scalability in many districts. This is a stubborn challenge that education leaders will have to confront if they are serious about implementing dual immersion programs and maintaining them in the long run. Institutions of higher education play a key role in developing and credentialing a steady pipeline of qualified, bilingual teachers, and funding from 2016 NPD grant competition can help them do so. In fact, the Department has already awarded a number of NPD grants to universities developing bilingual educators: over a quarter of (18 out of 73) went to projects with a bilingual certification or endorsement component.
The second invitational priority in 2016 calls for projects supporting the early learning workforce to effectively serve young ELLs from birth through third grade, particularly through pre-service preparation that equips educators with 鈥渢he foundational knowledge of developmental learning and language acquisition skills.鈥 Like the priority related to dual language programs, this focus is based on good evidence. Research suggests quality early learning and pre-K programs are particularly powerful for ELLs and children of immigrants (see , and ).
Taken together, the changes in competitive and invitational priorities in the 2016 NPD grant competition illustrate the direction the Department is moving to support ELLs and show that the federal government is still a key player in this work. In part, they signal a shift in focus away from STEM and high school to family engagement, bilingualism, and early learning. Of course, the priorities from 2011 are not suddenly obsolete. But that鈥檚 how priorities work: certain goals take precedence over others.
鈥This post is part of 麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚 Dual Language Learner National Work Group. . To subscribe to the biweekly newsletter, , enter your contact information, and select 鈥淓ducation Policy.鈥“