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Title I
Program
Description
This program provides financial assistance to LEAs and schools with high
numbers or high percentages of poor children to help ensure that all
children meet challenging state academic standards. Federal funds are
currently allocated through four statutory formulas that are based primarily
on census poverty estimates and the cost of education in each state.
Basic Grants provide funds to LEAs in which the number of children counted
in the formula is at least 10 and exceeds 2 percent of an LEA's school-age
population.
Concentration Grants flow to LEAs where the number of formula children
exceeds 6,500 or 15 percent of the total school-age population.
Targeted Grants are based on the same data used for Basic and Concentration
Grants except that the data are weighted so that LEAs with higher numbers or
higher percentages of poor children receive more funds. Targeted Grants flow
to LEAs where the number of schoolchildren counted in the formula (without
application of the formula weights) is at least 10 and at least 5 percent of
the LEA's school-age population.
Education Finance Incentive Grants (EFIG) distribute funds to states based
on factors that measure:
a state's effort to provide financial support for education compared to its
relative wealth as measured by its per capita income and
the degree to which education expenditures among LEAs within the state are
equalized.
Once a state's EFIG allocation is determined, funds are allocated (using a
weighted count formula that is similar to Targeted Grants) to LEAs in which
the number of poor children is at least 10 and at least 5 percent of the
LEA's school-age population. LEAs target the Title I funds they receive to
schools with the highest percentages of children from low-income families.
Unless a participating school is operating a schoolwide program, the school
must focus Title I services on children who are failing, or most at risk of
failing, to meet state academic standards. Schools in which poor children
make up at least 40 percent of enrollment are eligible to use Title I funds
for schoolwide programs that serve all children in the school. LEAs also
must use Title I funds to provide academic enrichment services to eligible
children enrolled in private schools.
Types of Projects
More than 50,000 public schools across the country use Title I funds to
provide additional academic support and learning opportunities to help
low-achieving children master challenging curricula and meet state standards
in core academic subjects. For example, funds support extra instruction in
reading and mathematics, as well as special preschool, after-school, and
summer programs to extend and reinforce the regular school curriculum.
Additional information
This program provides financial assistance through State educational
agencies (SEAs) to local educational agencies (LEAs) and public schools with
high numbers or percentages of poor children to help ensure that all
children meet challenging State academic content and student academic
achievement standards.
LEAs target the Title I funds they receive to public schools with the
highest percentages of children from low-income families. Unless a
participating school is operating a schoolwide program, the school must
focus Title I services on children who are failing, or most at risk of
failing, to meet State academic standards. Schools enrolling at least 40
percent of students from poor families are eligible to use Title I funds for
schoolwide programs that serve all children in the school.
In SY 2006-07 Title I served more than 17 million children. Of these
students, approximately 60 percent were in kindergarten through fifth grade,
21 percent in grades 6-8, 16 percent in grades 9-12, three percent in
preschool, and less than one percent ungraded.
Title I is designed to help students served by the program to achieve
proficiency on challenging State academic achievement standards. Title I
schools with percentages of low income students of at least 40 percent may
use Title I funds, along with other Federal, State, and local funds, to
operate a "schoolwide program" to upgrade the instructional program for the
whole school. Title I schools with less than 40 percent low income students
or that choose not to operate a schoolwide program offer a "targeted
assistance program" in which the school identifies students who are failing,
or most at risk of failing, to meet the State's challenging academic
achievement standards. Targeted assistance schools design, in consultation
with parents, staff, and district staff, an instructional program to meet
the needs of those students. Both schoolwide and targeted assistance
programs must use instructional strategies based on scientifically based
research and implement parental involvement activities.
Under Title I, local educational agencies (LEAs) are required to provide
services for eligible private school students, as well as eligible public
school students. In particular, section 1120 of Title I, Part A of the
Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), as amended by the No Child
Left Behind Act (NCLB), requires a participating LEA to provide eligible
children attending private elementary and secondary schools, their teachers,
and their families with Title I services or other benefits that are
equitable to those provided to eligible public school children, their
teachers, and their families. These services must be developed in
consultation with officials of the private schools. The Title I services
provided by the LEA for private school participants are designed to meet
their educational needs and supplement the educational services provided by
the private school. For additional information on services to eligible
private school children, see the U.S. Department of Education
Office of Non-Public Education website.
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Title
I: Allowable & Non-allowable Expenses
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ODE: PowerPoint
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Title I: Building
Review Checklist
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Title I:
Parent Involvement Building Checklist
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Parent Right to Know
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Annual Title I Sample Agenda
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