In 1997, SREB launched a comprehensive middle grades improvement
effort, Making Middle Grades Work. This research
report examines the design and implementation of this comprehensive
improvement effort in 52 middle grades schools in 16 states.
The study addresses four basic questions: 1) Is student
achievement higher for eighth-graders in the network than
for other eighth-graders? 2) Why do schools with similar
demographics perform differently? 3) Why is achievement
higher for students in schools that have implemented the
design more fully? 4) What can states, districts, and schools
do to improve middle grades achievement? The report includes
a summary of findings and recommendations for states, districts,
and schools.
What's New "AYP" Information Tells
Us About Schools, States, and Public Education 
This
report documents how AYP provides important new information
about academic achievement in America's public schools.
This year's first-ever application of the AYP formula is
providing the foundation for school improvement efforts
in all 50 states by uncovering large achievement gaps, identifying
schools that have made significant progress, and recognizing
schools with high percentages of low-income and minority
children meeting state proficiency benchmarks.
The
First Year: Student Performance on 10th Grade Benchmark Standards
and Subsequent Performance in the First Year of College (2001–2002)
Council
of Chief State School Officers: Accountability Systems
This
paper presents state-by-state data on the qualifications
of teachers in grades 7–12. The 50-state results from
the Schools and Staffing Surveys of 1994 and 2000 show the
percentage of teachers in each state that are fully certified
and have a major in their assigned teaching field. The analysis
is intended to help state leaders, educators, and others
obtain a picture of highly qualified teachers in their state
and to be able to compare their state statistics with states
across the nation. Since states have some flexibility in
meeting the standard for highly qualified teachers outlined
by NCLB, the analyses presented in this paper from a national
survey may be useful as a common benchmark for use by states
as they develop their own state-specific definitions and
measures.
No
Excuses: Lessons from 21 High-Performing, High-Poverty Schools
by Samuel Casey Carter
Many educators make excuses for the failure of most public
schools to teach low-income children. But across the nation
dozens of high-performing principals have identified those
effective practices that allow all children to excel regardless
of income level. In this report, Samuel Casey Carter, a
former Bradley Fellow at The Heritage Foundation, examines
the common practices of twenty-one principals of low-income
schools who set the standard for high achievement. The lessons
uncovered in these case studies provide an invaluable resource
for anyone interested in providing increased educational
opportunities for low-income children.
State
Content Standards: A 50 State Resource
This webpage provides information gathered from state department
of education web sites by the Council of Chief State School
Officers on K–12 academic standards and a direct link
to each state's current standards in various subjects.
Resources
and Best Practices for Implementing No Child Left Behind
These resources and best practices have been compiled by
AASA to help you implement the No Child Left Behind (NCLB)
Act or ESEA 2001. We've searched far and wide to find the
most useful tools, resources, and best practices, as well
as articles and organizations, to provide you with a one-stop
resource to better implement the provisions of this law.
Thinking
K–16: A New Core Curriculum for All: Aiming High for
Other People's Children
This
publication by The Education Trust looks at how to develop
curriculum to better prepare children for post-secondary
education.
State
Supported Prekindergarten Programs in SREB States: Growing
in Hard Times 
This
report profiles state-funded prekindergarten programs in
the SREB states and includes information on program characteristics,
2002–2003 enrollments and funding, and recent or anticipated
changes in program operations. Numbers of 4-year-old children
served by state pre-K programs and Head Start are compared
with estimated numbers of 4-year-olds living in poverty
to measure how states are doing in providing high-quality,
pre-K opportunities to at-risk children, as called for in
the SREB Goals for Education. The report finds that 12 SREB
states are serving at least as many at-risk children as
there are children in poverty, and two other states are
very close to meeting that goal.
Spinning
Our Wheels: Minority Teacher Supply in SREB States
In state after state, the percentage of minority teachers
is not increasing as fast as the percentage of minority
students, and the gap is not narrowing. Despite states'
efforts to address the problem, the percentages of minority
teachers in SREB states have not increased significantly.
This report looks at policies and practices in the SREB
states in recent years.
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