Wednesday, July 28, 2010

CALIFORNIA AWARDED FEDERAL CHARTER SCHOOLS GRANT


California Department of Education News Release

Release: #10-83
July 26, 2010

Contact: Tina Jung
E-mail: communications@cde.ca.gov
Phone: 916-319-0818

State Schools Chief Jack O'Connell Announces  California Is Awarded Federal Charter Schools Grant

SACRAMENTO — State Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O'Connell today announced the California Department of Education (CDE) was awarded a major federal Charter Schools Program grant through the U.S. Department of Education's Office of Innovation and Improvement. California had applied for $300 million in federal Charter School start-up grant funds. The U.S. Department of Education has not yet announced the amount California will receive from this competitive grant program.

"High-quality charter schools can spur innovation and provide communities more flexibility to create the kind of learning environment they want for their children," said O'Connell. "This infusion of federal funding will give a boost to communities trying to initiate and share information about a charter school so the organizers can focus their attention on helping students succeed academically."

California's federal charter grant application specifies that the state will use the federal funds to increase the number of high-quality charter schools in the state with stronger fiscal, governance, and academic accountability training and reporting requirements.The funds also are intended to sustain charter schools' capacity to improve the academic achievement of students and support the dissemination of effective practices of high quality charter schools. Preference will be given in the distribution of the funds to assist the development of high-quality charter schools located in high need communities where students attend schools in Program Improvement.

O'Connell has long been a supporter of high-quality charter schools that can serve as laboratories of education innovation. A charter school is a public school that usually is created or organized by a group of teachers, parents, and community leaders or by community-based organizations. A charter school may be sponsored by an existing local public school district governing board or county board of education.

Charter schools are generally exempt from most laws governing school districts, except where noted by law. In exchange for this increased flexibility, charter schools are held accountable for improving student academic achievement. The objective is to replace rules-based governance with performance-based accountability, thereby stimulating the creativity and commitment of teachers, parents, and citizens.

The federal Charter Schools Program funding is designed to help communities in the planning, program design, initial implementation, and dissemination of information on charter schools. As the grantee, the CDE will make the funding available as subgrants on a competitive basis to developers of charter schools who have applied for a charter. Charter schools will be able to apply for the subgrant funding once federal review of several requested waivers is complete, and the Legislature has approved a budget and the disbursement of the funds.

Once an applicant is awarded a subgrant through the CDE, the funding may be used for the planning and design of the education program for a charter school, refining the desired education results, refining methods for measuring progress toward achieving those results, and the initial implementation of the charter school. Implementation may include informing the community about the charter school and acquiring necessary equipment, materials, and supplies.

The CDE may reserve up to 10 percent of the grant for another subgrant to share lessons learned from high-quality charter schools with a demonstrated history of success. The purpose would be to share information about how to create and sustain high-quality, accountable schools with other public schools and charter schools.

Information on the federal Charter Schools Program may be found on the U.S. Department of Education Web site at Charter Schools Program [http://www2.ed.gov/programs/charter/index.html] (Outside Source).

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