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CEPI - Commonwealth Educational Policy Institute
Policy Issues - Finance / Operation

Kathy Kitchen, Editor

Remediation/At-Risk Student Equity Funding

Descriptive Context

Beginning in the mid-1980s with the publication of the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission’s (JLARC) reports on funding of the Standards of Quality, addressing equity issues in public education in Virginia became of paramount importance. JLARC examined both pupil equity and tax equity in its 1988 report, “Funding of the Standards of Quality, Part 2: SOQ Costs and Distribution.” Governor Wilder formed the “Governor’s Commission on Educational Opportunity for All Virginians” in April of 1990 to advise the Governor and the General Assembly on how the Commonwealth could further address and overcome differences in educational programs in Virginia’s public schools. This Commission made twenty-seven recommendations addressing program equity, pupil equity, and fiscal equity in its August, 1991 report.

Many of the recommendations of the Governor’s Commission were implemented. However, several local school boards in Virginia filed suit against the Commonwealth in the early 1990s claiming it was the Commonwealth’s responsibility to ensure fiscal equity among all school divisions in Virginia. The Commonwealth was successful in defending its funding methodology that remains essentially unchanged through the budget adopted for the 2000-2002 biennium.

With those challenges behind it, the Governor, General Assembly, and the State Board of Education have moved forward to address educational issues in terms of “standards reform,” making pupil equity its top priority. The proliferation of programs funded to assist local schools in ensuring all students successfully master the state Standards of Learning is now taking place.


Historical Perspective

In its August 1991 report, the Governor’s Commission on Educational Opportunity for All Virginians contained 12 recommendations that dealt specifically with pupil equity. These recommendations included:

  • Restructure the elementary grades to emphasize successful first-time learning, including reducing the pupil/teacher ratio in grades one through three,
  • Reduce the number and percentage of students retained in grade and dropping out, to increase the percentage of minority and economically disadvantaged students enrolled in college preparation and advanced placement programs, and to reduce the range of differences in student achievement,
  • Require all school divisions to offer voluntary preschool developmental programs for at-risk four-year-olds,
  • Address the need to coordinate community support to schools and students,
  • Assess the need for a School Breakfast Program in those schools which do not currently offer one,
  • Develop standards for funding programs for students for whom English is a second language, and for students from lower socioeconomic backgrounds who are educationally at risk,
  • Assess the need to revise the current SOQ related to special student needs, to include standards for funding vocational, remedial, gifted programs, and related services for handicapped children which reflect sound educational practice,
  • Require school divisions to identify annually students at risk of failing to meet criteria developed by the Board and the Department of Education so that these students can receive additional services, and
  • Establish partnerships with business, industry, governments, higher education, libraries, museums and other cultural entities to promote preschool-12 education.

With collaboration from or among many other state agencies, the Department of Education implemented the majority of these recommendations. Funding was provided by the General Assembly for several programs designed to enhance pupil equity. These programs include, but are not limited to:

  • At-Risk Funding – First begun in 1992-93, nearly $44 million is now distributed to all school divisions based upon free lunch participation. The program is designed to provide flexibility to divisions as long as the funds are used to support programs for students who are educationally at-risk.
  • English as a second language – Approximately $4 million is provided to 95 school divisions to support programs designed to improve the achievement for ESL students,
  • Reduced K-3 class sizes – One of the first programs designed to provide funding at the individual school level, nearly $71 million is now appropriated to lower class sizes in grades K-3 in schools having free lunch participation of 20 percent or more, and
  • A program for at-risk four-year-olds – Approximately $21.5 million is appropriated to provide high quality preschool education to 60% of the at-risk four-year-olds not served by other programs (Title 1, Head Start, etc.). Currently 66 school divisions provide programs through this effort.

A chart, developed by staff from the Senate Finance Committee, providing information on all programs currently funded for at-risk students may be viewed  by clicking here.

Standards of Learning

The State Board of Education set forth an agenda for education reform that was multi-faceted. First, Standards were to be developed that set forth what students should know prior to graduating from high school. Student knowledge of the Standards would be tested in a statewide assessment program. Students and schools would be held accountable through a system of report cards issued to parents and revisions to the Standards of Accreditation that would give teeth to the reform.

The revised Standards of Learning were adopted by the State Board of Education in June of 1995. The General Assembly appropriated funds in 1996 for the development and field testing of a new assessment program. The program, adopted by the Board of Education, includes a norm-referenced test in grades 4, 9, and 11 and state tests on the SOLs in grades 3, 5, 8 and end-of-course tests at the high school level. Additional funding was provided for testing in 1998 to maintain the new program and again in 1999 additional resources were provided to allow students to take the tests later in the school year and still get results prior to the close of the year.

Since the adoption of the Standards and the assessment program, a great deal of pressure has been placed on divisions, schools, and teachers to ensure students can pass the SOL tests. The General Assembly has appropriated funding for a plethora of programs designed to assist local school divisions, primarily in remediation efforts.

Programs Funded

Funding has been provided in numerous areas to assist school divisions in meeting the requirements of the Standards of Learning. One of the earliest funding streams was provided for teacher training and curriculum development to assist divisions in aligning curriculum with the SOLs. This funding, one of the few programs to be funded 100% by the state, is still in the budget for the 2000-2002 biennium. Another program, funded originally during the 1997 session, provides for additional instruction for early reading intervention for first-grade students with reading deficiencies. This program has since been expanded to students in kindergarten through third grade. The General Assembly also provided funding on a per student basis to assist school divisions in purchasing extra instructional materials to support the SOLs. The funding can be used for textbooks or any other instructional materials related to implementation of the Standards.

During the 1998 session, significant funding was included for a program entitled, “SOL Remediation.” This funding was designed to assist students who do not pass the SOL tests. In addition, during the 2000 session, a SOL Algebra Readiness Program was funded beginning in the 2001-2002 school year.



Differing Perspectives

The General Assembly has appropriated significant funding over time to address the needs of students who are at-risk of educational failure. Policymakers continue to seek information to determine whether programs they have supported are working in the local schools. To that end, Section 22.1-199.2 of the Code of Virginia requires the Board of Education to promulgate regulations establishing standards for remediation programs to include:

  • An evaluation by local school divisions of their remedial programs based upon pass rates on the SOL tests and
  • Division reporting of data pertaining to the demographic and educational characteristics of students identified as needing remediation.

These regulations were required by August 1, 1999 for remedial summer school and Standards of Learning remediation programs and by August 1, 2000 for SOQ Remediation, dropout prevention and at-risk add-on programs. The Board of Education promulgated emergency regulations that were sent to school divisions in August of 1999. These regulations required divisions to maintain individual student records for all students identified for remedial summer school and other remedial programs including the “SOL remediation program.”

Under the direction of the General Assembly, the Department of Education was required to develop a set of performance measures that can be used to annually assess the effectiveness of the seven programs for students at-risk of educational failure that are currently funded by the State. The Department of Education funded the College of William and Mary to develop and test the performance measurement process. As part of that study, a survey was sent to divisions in June requesting programmatic and financial data related to these programs. The study is intended to answer the following questions:

  • Who benefits from the at-risk dollars the school receives?
  • What specific resources and programs lead to these benefits?
  • What are the short- and long-term results for participants and others?
  • Are there promising school-based practices that work with at-risk students that can be shared with other divisions with similar problems?

School divisions continue to express concern regarding the feasibility of developing programs with specific state and local dollars and struggling to tie individual student success or failure to any one program. The likelihood of students participating in numerous programs is very high. In addition, some state funding included in the above mentioned legislation has been in place for ten to twenty years with flexibility given to divisions on the use of those funds. To require divisions to tie those dollars to specific programs and student outcomes is not only difficult, but counter-productive.

During the 2000 session of the General Assembly, language was included in the Appropriation Act at Item 143.B.10 stating:

School divisions may choose to use state payments provided for Standards of Quality remediation, Standards of Learning remediation, and summer school remediation as a block grant for remediation purposes, without restrictions or reporting requirements, other than reporting necessary as a basis for determining funding for the programs.

This authorization suspends the requirements of the regulations mentioned above until June 30, 2002. At that time, similar language will be required in the 2002-2004 Appropriation Act or divisions will be required to meet the requirements of the regulations. Clarifying direction from the Department of Education was sent to school divisions and may be reviewed at: Department of Education.

 

Snapshots of Researrch and Court Decisions

Over the years a great deal of research has been conducted surrounding the characteristics of those students who are most likely to be at-risk of educational failure. Much of this research was used by the Governor’s Commission on Educational Opportunity for All Virginians in developing its recommendations. Senate Document No. 13, 1993 stated:

Twenty-five years of national research and at least four analyses of Virginia school divisions data have found a strong and persistent relationship between student poverty and educational outcomes. School divisions with high concentrations of impoverished students are more likely to report lower test scores, greater percentages of overage students, and higher rates of absenteeism and dropout than are divisions with low rates of student poverty.

One source of additional information on this subject: North Central Regional Educational Laboratory

Contrary to the high volume of research available surrounding the characteristics of students likely to be at-risk of educational failure, there is no research available on the effects of additional funding and programs aimed at providing remedial instruction to students failing the Standards of Learning. The lack of empirical evidence leads policymakers to want to gather information on “what works” and know if their efforts are making a difference. The work underway by the College of William and Mary is the first stab at this question. However, absent the ability of school divisions to provide information linking individual students to individual programs, the data will not be available.

 

The Issue in Practice

Most school divisions provide programs of intervention, prevention, and remediation to all students needing additional instruction. Such programs may include:

  • One-on-one assistance,
  • Small group instruction,
  • Alternative schools at the elementary, middle, or high school level,
  • Remedial summer school,
  • Pre-school programs, and
  • Computer-assisted instruction.

Some alternatives might be year-long placements such as alternative schools; others might be provided on an as-needed basis. Most programs are designed to meet the needs of individual students rather than for a selected number of weeks, days, or hours. In addition, students might often be placed in more than one program during the same time period. Hypothetical examples of multiple interventions might look like the following:

  • Student A - 4th grade

    Characteristics
    1. Scored in the bottom quartile on Stanford 9 and
    2. Did not pass 3rd grade SOL in mathematics

    Remediation Plan
    1. Morning tutoring program (1 on 1 instruction),
    2. “Lunch time learners” (small group instruction), and
    3. Summer school intervention course

  • Student B - 8th grade

    Characteristics
    1. Performing below grade level in language arts,
    2. Teacher identified as likely to fail 8th grade SOL in reading

    Remediation Plan
    1. Prescribed year-long program of reading reinforcement,
    2. After-school tutoring program

  • Student C - 10th grade

    Characteristics
    1. Failed Algebra I end-of-course test.

    Remediation Plan
    1. Remedial summer school, and
    2. Computer-aided instruction (school year and summer program).

Funds from state, federal and local sources are combined in schools and in programs to maximize services to identified students. In most school divisions, with the exception of remedial summer school and dropout prevention, funds from state sources for remediation and at-risk programs cannot readily be linked to distinct programs. SOQ Remedial Education and At-risk add-on funds have been provided to school divisions with maximum flexibility for many years (since 1980-81 and 1992-93 respectively); state funds have been combined with local funds to offer many programs. Additional state funding for “SOL Remediation” has been used in many cases to enlarge and enhance programs that had previously been in place. Reporting on the numbers of students and types of programs offered is possible; however, students might be counted more than once due to multiple placements during a certain time period.

 

Related Issues

Implementing programs designed to promote pupil equity has been a focus in the Commonwealth since the early 1990s. These programs, such as preschool for at-risk children and lower class sizes in the primary grades were intended to provide additional assistance to students who came to the public schools without the basic skills needed for success. In more recent years, the focus has shifted to programs designed specifically to ensure students pass the SOL tests.

The issue that is now surfacing is a desire to find out which “dollar” can guarantee the outcome desired. Past efforts to determine what impact funding in total has on student achievement have not been successful. To now try to determine which specific funding stream is making a difference in performance is problematic.

 

CEPI Summary

School divisions should be held accountable for the use of state and local funds provided for students at-risk of educational failure including those originally designed to enhance pupil equity and those more recently funded to assist students in reaching the Standards of Learning. The primary accountability tool has been designed - the SOL tests. These scores will provide a measure of determining the success of local efforts.

When students are served in a variety of programs, an increase in performance cannot be attributed to any single program. It is likely that a combination of efforts such as instruction in the primary grades (lower K-3 pupil teacher ratios and extra reading instruction), remedial efforts (tutoring, computer assisted instruction), curriculum alignment, and the use of other tools will lead to success by the student.

Tracking individual dollars to programs is not feasible given the need to provide flexibility to divisions and schools to design programs to address individual student needs. Divisions can provide information on remediation efforts such as demographic and educational characteristics of students taking part in a variety of remedial programs, as well as information on the types of programs offered.

Providing state assistance for remediation programs in a block grant approach would provide maximum program flexibility and best serve the interest of all students. Ultimate accountability will be at the individual student level and school level through the Standards of Accreditation.

 

Legislative History

Click here for summary of recent Virginia Legislative history of  “Remediation/At-Risk Student Equity Funding.”

 

Sources, Cites, Links

At-Risk Funding – FY 2000-01, Senate Finance Committee, 2000 (chart linked earlier in this discussion under Historical Perspective).

Governor’s Commission on Educational Opportunity for All Virginians, Final Report, 1991. For further document detail, contact the Virginia Department of Education.

“Regulations Governing Remedial Programs,” Section 22.1-199.2 of the Code of Virginia, Presentation to the Joint Subcommittee on Remediation, Chesterfield County Public Schools, November 29, 1999.

Study under progress by the College of William and Mary at the request of the Department of Education. Contact: Dr. Tom Ward or Mrs. Ruby Potts at the College of William and Mary – (757) 221-2358 or (757) 221-2357.

 

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