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Implementing an Effective SES Program PAFPC 2013. Erin Oberdorf, SES Program Manager Dr. Jack Clark, Allentown School District. Agenda . What is SES Providers Time Line Requirements Of PDE Of Provider Of LEA Implementation. Purpose of SES.
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Implementing an Effective SES ProgramPAFPC 2013 Erin Oberdorf, SES Program Manager Dr. Jack Clark, Allentown School District
Agenda • What is SES • Providers • Time Line • Requirements • Of PDE • Of Provider • Of LEA • Implementation
Purpose of SES • To offer the parents of students attending Title I schools in need of improvement additional sources of academic instruction for their children outside normal school hours in: • Reading • Language Arts • Math • Science
What is SES • Supplemental Education Services • After school or summer school • Actual program; NOT homework help • Provision of Title I of ESEA, No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) • Title I School not making Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) for three or more years • School Improvement II and beyond • Addresses the Needs of Low Income Students
State SES Websitehttp://www.education.state.pa.us/portal/server.pt/community/supplemental_education_services/7416/home Login Instructions Provider list Application
Resources on PDE Site Allocations Buildings Requirements Toolkit Cover Page Clearance Information Complaint Procedure Rubric USDE Guidance Monitoring Instrument
Toolkit on PDE Site • SES Overview • Responsibilities of each party • Samples and templates • District notification • Parent letters • Contract • Learning plan • Tracking and attendance forms • Report to parents and teachers
Eligible Students • Low-income students attending Title I schools in need of improvement • Eligible students prioritized by greatest academic need if resources are limited • Students are identified by the local public school
SES Funding • 20% of Title I funds are set aside for School Choice and SES • Per pupil funding is limited to the cost of services per child or the school’s Title I allocation per pupil. • When more students request services than the school district can fund, the school district must place a priority on serving students who are the lowest achieving
Non-Public Schools • Non-public Schools/Students do not receive Supplemental Educational Services
Timeline: 2013 • Feb 4: Open provider application • April 12: Close provider application • April 26: Clearances & Assurances due to IU 4 • July: Pre-approval list posted • Aug: Mandatory meetings for providers • Aug: Approved provider list posted • Aug: Parent letters sent with provider list • Sept: Providers are contacted by parents • Oct: Providers sign agreement with LEAs • Nov: SES Services begin within 30 days of agreement signature
Provider Classification • Local Educational Agency • School entity (public or private) • Charter School • Institution of Higher Education (public or private) • Non-profit organization • Faith based • Community based • For-profit organization
Provider Format • Individual tutoring • Small group tutoring • Maximum of 5 • Distance Learning Technology • Tutors not permitted outside US
Application • Contact Information • School District/County to provide services • Program Structure/Model • Staff Qualifications • Evaluation • Budget • Assurances
Instructional Strategies • NOT HOMEWORK HELP • Instruction and content is aligned with PA State Academic Standards • Scientifically based research
Location of Services • Listed on approved application but can be changed • LEA has veto power • Must be current with LEA contract • Must be in a safe area for students • Must be conducive to learning • Supervision of students at all times • NO IN-HOME TUTORING • Submit updates for application to PDE • On Site monitoring by State and LEA • Attendance verified with parent signature before payment issued
Clearances • Required from the provider contact and all personnel who have contact with children. • Criminal Background - approved by PDE • Child Abuse – approved by PDE • FBI – checked on line by LEA • PDE lists all approved tutors • Application • Background checks
PDE Responsibilities • Approve provider applications and post on website • Develop standards and techniques for monitoring quality and effectiveness of providers’ services (Site Visit Checklist) • Provide technical assistance regarding SES to all stakeholders
Provider Responsibilities • Provide approved program • Enter into contract with LEA • Show improvement of students • Provide necessary documentation during and at end of year • Have all student contact personnel approved by SEA/LEA • Report to parents/school personnel
Provider Responsibilities cont. • Providers responsible to have strategies in place: • Model designed to increase student achievement • Ongoing assessments • May not: • Change parent choice • Provide incentives which are excessive • Charge registration fees • Provide services during the regular school day
Qualifications of Tutors • Not required to be certified teachers • Must meet qualifications on application • Professional development is aligned with classroom instruction • Clearance requirements apply to all staff members prior to direct contact with students
LEA Responsibilities • SES Notification • To all eligible children • In addition to SI letter • In a language that parents understand • Set reasonable timeline for parent response • Attach waiver to disclose student information • Response by mail, email, fax, in person • Provide information through newspapers, posters, and internet • Template in Toolkit
Invite Participation • Telephone • Invite Parent Participation • Answer Questions • Provider Fair • Agreement Procedures (set deadlines) • Achievement Goals and Timelines • Assessment and Evaluation Procedures • Parents meet providers • Incentive Policy must be observed • Provider can call once FERPA is received
Process • Provider confirms services to the school district • Letter of Eligibility to be mailed to parents from district • Procedures for SES providers • Parent to contact provider directly • Parent to determine dates and times for tutoring, also transportation • After parent selects provider: • LEA signs agreement with provider, begin services within 30 days • Evaluation and Accountability Reports are provided to LEA from provider
Changes for 2013 • NEW rates this year! • Student to tutor ratio of 3 or fewer:1 is $50 • Student to tutor ratio of 4-5: 1 is $45 • Online tutoring with no student/tutor interaction is $30 • NEW student sign-in sheets • Mandatory use at all provider locations
Tips for LEAs • Verify accuracy of all invoices submitted • Conduct on-site monitoring • If fraud is suspected, contact the Office of Inspector General • OIG is conducting a session during the conference
Top 5 Issues • Change in local representatives • work is not seamlessly transitioned and the new reps are completely unaware of what’s going on and where to start • Allowing providers to have access to student applications • Used as a marketing tool • Provider signs up students who are not eligible • Provider completes applications for parents (falsifying student applications) • Frequent site changes- either closing or adding a site • hard to keep track of when you have many different providers • Providers signing up students and never serving them • Incorrect completion of student sign-in sheets • Sign-in is supposed to occur daily - never in advance
Additional Requirements • At least 2 enrollment periods • Allow same access to buildings as other groups • SES information must be posted on their website • Benefits of SES • Number of eligible/enrolled • LEA’s partnership with Community organizations
SES Agreement • Achievement Goals • Develop goals in consultation with parents • Provide grade level standards. • Timeline for Improving Achievement • Include instructional calendar • Evidence-based Model • Sample agreement in SES toolkit
SES Agreement (cont’d) • Assessment and Evaluation • Provide description of how student progress will be measured • Describe how parent and teacher will be regularly informed of progress • Written Communication • Informal Oral Communication • Formal Meetings • Liability Insurance if required by LEA
On Site Reviews: Monitoring • Copies of Child Abuse and Background Clearance Forms (Forms must also be received by state prior to any instruction.) • Individual Education Plan (for each child) • Student Assessment Data • Student Progress Report (signatures of parents and classroom teachers to verify communication) • Student Sign-In Sheets (signatures required to verify attendance) • Instructional materials for all students (model must match that in the state application and district agreement) • Student Enrollment Forms • FERPAs • Teacher certificates (if stated in the application)
Immediate Revocation • At on-site review • Assurances not verified • Clearances not available • Student health and safety issues • Provider defrauds the contracted school districts
NCLB Complaint Procedures • A “complaint” is a written, signed statement filed by an individual or an organization. • Statement that PDE or a LEA has violated a requirement of federal statute or regulations which apply to program under NCLB • The facts and evidence on which this statement is based. • Information on any discussions, meetings or correspondence with PDE or LEA regarding the complaint.
LEA Provider Policy • Written policy given to all providers • How to work with the LEA and the process for providing services • Contact for LEA • How to market program • Requirements of LEA • Communications of changes (and due dates, if necessary) • Children arriving/leaving • School policies if in LEA building
Contact • Erin Oberdorf: PDE • eoberdorf@pa.gov • 717-787-7135 • Justi Glaros: IU 4 • justi_glaros@miu4.k12.pa.us • 724-458-6700 x1224