The
Biden-Harris Administration believes that public education is the
bedrock of our democracy and the foundation of opportunity in our
country—and that every young person should have the chance to learn,
grow, and pursue their dreams. Since Day One, the Biden-Harris
Administration has focused on improving academic achievement,
increasing student attendance and engagement, and building communities
where all students feel they belong and can thrive. That’s why the
Biden-Harris Administration made the single-largest investment in K-12
education in history—and it is delivering results, including student achievement gains. A Harvard and Stanford study, for example,
for example, examined outcomes in districts that received large amounts
of federal COVID-19 relief funding, which ranged from approximately
$4,000 to more than $13,000 per student, and found that these
investments will pay for itself in increased earnings
for students who benefit, with particularly large impacts for students
in schools with high rates of poverty. These investments not only
improve academic achievement, but other student outcomes. Another economic study shows
that a 10% increase in per student spending each year for all 12 years
of public school leads to about 7% higher wages in adulthood, with more
pronounced effects for students from low-income backgrounds.
As students across the country head back to school, the Biden-Harris
Administration is working to make sure America’s schools have the
resources and supports they need to continue their important progress.
Working together, at the federal, state, and local level, we must all
double-down on strengthening reading and math skills; increasing
student attendance and engagement; providing afterschool and expanded
learning programs; and increasing access to intensive tutoring. We must
also provide teachers and school leaders with evidence-based
preparation, development, coaching, and resources to support student
academic success and literacy and math and their overall well-being,
which is foundational to that success.
As part of our ongoing commitment to support student success, today we are announcing the following Administration actions:
- Awarding $149 million to support states in implementing evidence-based reading interventions, including efforts to ensure every child is reading fluently by third grade. The
U.S. Department of Education’s Comprehensive Literacy State Development
grant program supports states in creating comprehensive literacy
programs and providing professional development to advance literacy
skills, including pre-literacy skills, reading, and writing, for
children and youth, focusing on underserved students, including
students from low-income backgrounds, English learners, and children
with disabilities. For example, Ohio will partner with state colleges
and universities to better prepare educators to deliver evidence-based
literacy instruction, and Montana will use funds to expand reading
instructional skills for educators in rural communities.
- Awarding $30 million to support comprehensive assessment systems that inform teaching and support learning. The
U.S. Department of Education’s Competitive Grants for State Assessments
program supports high-quality state assessment systems that measure
student achievement and progress using multiple measures and gives
insight into student learning, helping to inform instruction and
support student achievement. For example, Nebraska will use funds to
support English Learners by making assessment data more usable and
actionable for educators as they design instruction.
- Issuing new school improvement guidance focused on evidence-based practices to support students and educators and accelerate academic achievement. To
further support states and districts in their efforts to increase
student success, the U.S. Department of Education is issuing school
improvement guidance to support effective implementation of the
Elementary and Secondary Education Act. The guidance provides examples
of evidence-based approaches to support teaching and learning and drive
student achievement. This includes addressing chronic absenteeism (for
example, through early warning systems and improved family engagement,
like home visits and effective parent communication such as texting),
and providing high-quality tutoring (in small groups, 2-3 times per
week by a well-prepared tutor, during the school day, and aligned with
classroom instruction), and afterschool, expanded, and summer learning
programs. This draft guidance is open for public comment until October
4, 2024. The Department will consider this community input and issue
updated guidance by the end of the year.
- Releasing a new resource for educators on evidence-based strategies for increasing student literacy and math achievement. The
Institute of Education Sciences is releasing a resource for educators
on instructional strategies for increasing student success in literacy
and math. Each resource includes concrete practices that can be used by
teachers from early grades to high school, and provides links to
additional resources that can support learning at home.
- To
support states, districts, schools, and families in addressing chronic
absenteeism and increase student engagement, the Administration is:
- Calling
on Governors and state education leaders to create statewide student
data systems that provide chronic absenteeism-related data for all
schools that are actionable, help target interventions, and drive
improvement. The Administration encourages
all state leaders to ensure that every school district in their state
has the real-time data they need to identify and reduce chronic
absenteeism and improve student success. States including Alabama,
Connecticut, Indiana, and Rhode Island have developed innovative
statewide student information systems to help increase student
attendance. At a minimum, state systems are encouraged to provide:
- to the public, up-to-date rates of chronic absenteeism and whether rates are declining or increasing;
- to
educators, real-time, school-level data that enables them to identify
the root causes of chronic absenteeism, select the appropriate
interventions, target resources, and measure effectiveness; and
- to parents and families, real-time information on their child’s attendance.
- Calling
on industry vendors that provide student information systems to improve
the availability and utility of student attendance data. This
includes making attendance data available to states and districts at no
additional cost; not charging districts to access, securely export, or
display their own data; and adopting industry aligned data standards or
practices for student attendance data that allows for interoperability
between the modules that states and districts use, between vendors, and
between districts that may use different data systems.
- To
support these efforts, this year, the Department of Education will
issue a resource for state leaders highlighting different state
approaches to creating and implementing data systems to address chronic
absenteeism along with recommendations for states and local leaders. The guide will also include information on how federal funding can be used to support these efforts.
- Founding the Student Attendance and Engagement Solutions Network, part of the National Partnership for Student Success (NPSS), a partnership among the U.S. Department of Education, AmeriCorps, and the Johns Hopkins University Everyone Graduates Center.
The Network supports school districts and states in their efforts to
reduce chronic absenteeism, increase student engagement, and enhance
prevention strategies for the 2024-25 academic year and beyond. To
date, almost 200 school districts across 43 states and eight state
education agencies, in total representing more than 11,000 schools and
7.2 million students, have joined the network to learn from each other
about how to improve attendance and engagement. The Network is open for
districts and states to join. More information on the network and how
to join can be found here.
- Releasing a joint resource by
the U.S. Departments of Education and Transportation highlighting ways
to provide safe, reliable transit options to get young people to and
from school and support everyday student attendance. Many
students miss school because of transportation issues, especially in
vulnerable communities. To address this issue, transit agencies, school
districts, and local and state government leaders can work together to
improve transit options for families, including through offering free
or reduced transit fares, expanding safe routes to school, and creating
a “walking or bike bus”. This resource includes strategies to support
students and families in getting to and from school at low or no cost,
and federal funding available to support these efforts through the
Departments of Education and Transportation.
- Releasing,
this month, a joint resource for parents by the U.S. Departments of
Education and Agriculture on how healthy school meals support regular
attendance. This resource provides
information that schools can use in engaging parents and caregivers on
how school meals bolster everyday student attendance and support
healthy growth and development and how to access programs.
- Launching
the “Attendance Champions Challenge” to hear directly from young people
on creative solutions to address chronic absenteeism. The
Challenge, hosted on challenge.gov, will encourage state and local
leaders to directly engage young people (ages 13-19) in sharing
barriers to regular school attendance and proposing viable, creative
solutions to support their attendance and engagement. The Challenge is
open until November 29th and more information can be found at this website.
- Providing parents with resources on navigating whether to send kids to school when they are experiencing health symptoms. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and external organizations are releasing resources on how to support consistent school attendance, while also preventing spread of illness.
In
addition to these actions by the Administration, a number of
organizations have taken action to tackle absenteeism, as previewed
during the White House Every Day Counts Summit. These actions include a messaging toolkit for
states, districts, and educators based on new research around
effectively communicating with parents to increase student attendance,
developed by the Ad Council Research Institute (ACRI), with support from Overdeck Family Foundation, available on September 10th. Information on additional actions by organizations is available here.
These resources build on the previous Administration actions to promote academic achievement and student success, including:
- Securing
$130 billion for the largest-ever investment in public education
through state and district funding in the American Rescue Plan (ARP). ARP
has been used to help schools safely reopen, and address the academic,
mental health, and other needs of students. ARP funding has put more
teachers in our classrooms and more support staff in our schools;
expanded high-dosage tutoring; led to record expansion of summer and
after-school programs; improved HVAC systems; and increased access to a
wide range of student supports. The most recent data shows that states
and districts have allocated more than $70 billion to activities that
address students’ academic, social, and emotional needs, including
tutoring, afterschool, and summer learning, and research is showing
that these investments are working.
- Enabling
states to continue investing pandemic relief funds into academic
achievement efforts in the 2024-25 school year and focus remaining
resources on improving outcomes. The Department issued a letter, Frequently Asked Questions, and a template to
support States and provide a critical pathway to continue to use
ARP dollars in the 2024-2025 school year, including on evidence-based
academic and other student supports.
- Fully
enforcing the ARP maintenance of equity provisions to ensure that
States maintain their own levels of education spending, especially for
communities with high rates of poverty. Under
the Department’s robust implementation of these fiscal equity
provisions, 48 States, Puerto Rico, and the District of Columbia
safeguarded funding in communities with high rates of poverty and drove
almost $800 million to under-resourced schools.
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