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Original Articles

Federal School Improvement Grants (SIGs): How Capacity and Local Conditions Matter

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Pages 27-52 | Published online: 28 Jan 2015
 

Abstract

In 2009, the federal government committed over $3 billion nationwide to help states and districts turn around their worst-performing schools. The U.S. Department of Education intended for the School Improvement Grants (SIGs) to spur dramatic change.This report looks at the results of a field study of the first-year implementation of those grants in Washington State, which received $50 million in SIG funding over three years. Researchers hoped to see what school-level changes were underway, how they compared to the intent of the grants, and the early role that districts played in SIG implementation.The report provides findings from the state, district, and school level. Researchers found that, with some exceptions, districts and schools in Washington State are approaching the turnaround work in ways only marginally different from past school improvement efforts. Despite the hard work of administrators, principals, and especially teachers, the majority of schools studied show little evidence of the type of bold and transformative changes the SIGs were intended to produce.The report offers recommendations regarding the roles that federal, state, and local education agencies should play in support of school turnaround work. Those administering future grants targeted at the nation's lowest-performing schools could avoid the problems described here and improve their chances of affecting dramatic, not incremental, change.

Notes

Names of the districts studied are not revealed to ensure the anonymity of the interviewees.

For the first round of grants, 73% of the schools chose to implement the transformation model, which, when compared with conversion to a charter school, complete restaffing, or closure, was easily determined the path of least resistance.

There was wide variation among schools in terms of the numbers of teachers who were asked to or who chose to leave. In one school, just one teaching position was vacant; in another, more than half of all teaching positions needed to be filled.

Such schools are also referred to as “Christmas tree schools” (Sebring & Bryk, Citation2000).

A school closure model received approximately $95,000 in SIG funds.

Exemplars for successful turnaround can be found in Hartford, CT; New Orleans; New York City; Chicago; and Hamilton County, TN. CMOs worth a look include Mastery Public Schools and Aspire in Philadelphia (U.S. Department of Education, 2009).

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