Title I Schoolwide Components is
a comprehensive reform strategy designed to upgrade the entire educational
program in a Title I school in order to improve the achievement of the lowest
achieving students.
Components of a Title I Schoolwide Program Plan
Section 1114 of the statute enumerates the 10 components of a schoolwide program.
IN GENERAL- A schoolwide program shall include the following components:
- A comprehensive needs assessment of the entire school (including the needs of migrant children as defined in Section 1306) with information about the academic achievement of children in relation to the state academic content standards as described in Section 1111(b)(1).
- Schoolwide reform strategies that:
- Instruction by highly qualified teachers.
- High-quality and ongoing professional development for teachers, principals, and paraprofessionals and, if appropriate, pupil services personnel, parents, and other staff to enable all children in the school to meet the state academic content standards in accord with Section 1119 and subsection 1114 (a)(4).
- Strategies to attract highly qualified teachers to high-need schools.
- Strategies to increase parental involvement through means such as family literacy services in accord with Section 1118.
- Plans for assisting preschool children in the transition from early childhood programs, such as Head Start, Even Start, Early Reading First, or a state-run preschool program, to local elementary school programs.
- Measures to include teachers in decisions regarding the use of academic assessments (described in Section 1111[b][3]) to provide information on, and to improve, the achievement of individual students and the overall instructional program.
- Effective, timely assistance for students who experience difficulty in attaining the proficient or advanced level of the academic content standards as required by Section 1111(b)(1). Students' difficulties must be identified in a timely way and in such a way as to provide information on which to base effective assistance.
- Coordination and integration of federal, state, and local services and programs, including programs supported under ESEA, violence prevention programs, nutrition programs, housing programs, Head Start, adult education, vocational and technical education, and job training.