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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

September 13, 2010
For More Information Contact:

JP O'Hare

(518) 474-1201

Press@nysed.gov

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State Education Department Awards $4 Million Federal School Improvement Grant To Yonkers City Schools

New York State Commissioner of Education David Steiner today announced that the Yonkers City School District will receive $4 million for the 2010- 2011 school year to help turn around its Persistently Lowest Achieving schools through the federal School Improvement Grants (SIG) program. These funds are part of over $308 million that was made available to New York State this spring through the United States Department of Education’s (USED) School Improvement Grant Fund under Section 1003(g) of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), from money set aside in the 2009 budget and the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

Regent Saul B. Cohen said, "We are entering a new era of reform in which we will build upon New York’s current initiatives to intervene in low performing schools and improve student outcomes as a result. New federal funding opportunities will allow us to work with districts to go beyond incremental improvements to create truly excellent models of education for our students, particularly in those schools where students need our help the most."

Regent Harry Phillips III, said, “We applaudYonkers Superintendent Bernard Pierorazio and his team for developing an excellent plan that incorporates proven strategies to turnaround its low performing schools.The State Education Department will actively support the district’s transformation process.”

In February, the Education Department identified 57 persistently lowest-achieving schools, in seven school districts across the state. In June, these districts were invited to apply for School Improvement Grants under Section 1003(g), in order to support implementation of one of four intervention models prescribed by the USDE. To receive funding for the 2010-2011 school year, districts with identified schools must implement one of the following prescribed intervention models:

  • RESTART MODEL:Convert a school or close it and re-open it as a charter school or under an education management organization.
  • TURNAROUND MODEL:Replace the principal, screen existing school staff, and rehire no more than half the teachers; adopt a new governance structure; and improve the school through curriculum reform, professional development, extending learning time, and other strategies.
  • TRANSFORMATION MODEL: Replace the principal and improve the school through comprehensive curriculum reform, professional development, extending learning time and, by the end of the 2010-11 school year, amend any existing collective bargaining agreement as necessary to require that teachers (or building principals where applicable) assigned to these schools be evaluated in the 2011-12 school year and thereafter in accordance with recently enacted legislation pertaining to principal and teacher evaluation.
  • SCHOOL CLOSURE:Close the school and send the students to higher-achieving schools in the district.

The Yonkers City School District has received funding in the following amounts to implement a model in these schools:

School Name Grant Award for 2010-2011 Model
Roosevelt HS

$2 million

Transformation

Emerson MS

$2 million

Turnaround

Based on satisfactory implementation of the approved plans for these schools, the Yonkers City School District is eligible to receive two additional years of School Improvement Grant funding for model implementation in these schools.

The $4,000,000 made available to the Yonkers City School District was awarded based on a comprehensive review of their School Improvement Grant application, which included implementation plans for each school identified as persistently lowest achieving, and required districts to demonstrate evidence that they had the capacity to support implementation of the models in these schools. Yonker’s application can be found here:.