U.S. Department of Education
Office of Communications & Outreach, Press
Office
400 Maryland Ave., S.W.
Washington, D.C. 20202
FOR RELEASE Contact: Justin Hamilton
Aug. 24, 2010 (202) 401-1576 or [log in to unmask]
9 STATES AND THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA WIN SECOND ROUND
RACE TO THE TOP GRANTS
U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan announced today
that 10 applicants have won grants in the second phase of the Race to the Top
competition. Along with Phase 1 winners Delaware and Tennessee, 11 states and
the District of Columbia have now been awarded money in the Obama
administration’s groundbreaking education reform program that will
directly impact 13.6 million students and 980,000 teachers in 25,000 schools.
The 10 winning Phase 2 applications in alphabetical order
are: the District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Maryland,
Massachusetts, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, and Rhode Island.
“These states show what is possible when adults
come together to do the right thing for children,” said Secretary Arne
Duncan. “Every state that applied showed a tremendous amount of
leadership and a bold commitment to education reform. The creativity and
innovation in each of these applications is breathtaking,” Duncan
continued. “We set a high bar and these states met the challenge.”
While peer reviewers rated these 10 as having the highest
scoring plans, very few points separated them from the remaining applications.
The deciding factor on the number of winners selected hinged on both the
quality of the applications and the funds available.
“We had many more competitive applications than
money to fund them in this round,” Duncan said. “We’re very
hopeful there will be a Phase 3 of Race to the Top and have requested $1.35
billion dollars in next year’s budget. In the meantime, we will partner
with each and every state that applied to help them find ways to carry out the
bold reforms they’ve proposed in their applications.”
A total of 46 states and the District of Columbia put
together comprehensive education reform plans to apply for Race to the Top in
Phases 1 and 2. Over the course of the Race to the Top competition, 35 states
and the District of Columbia have adopted rigorous common, college- and
career-ready standards in reading and math, and 34 states have changed laws or
policies to improve education.
Every state that applied has already done the hard work
of collaboratively creating a comprehensive education reform agenda. In the
coming months, the Department plans to bring all states together to help ensure
the success of their work implementing reforms around college- and career-ready
standards, data systems, great teachers and leaders, and school
turnarounds.
In addition to the reforms supported by Race to the Top,
the Department has made unprecedented resources available through reform
programs like the Investing in Innovation Fund, the Teacher Incentive Fund, and
the School Improvement Grants under Title I.
Through all of these programs, the Department of Education
will be distributing almost $10 billion to support reform in states and local
communities.
"As we look at the last 18 months, it is absolutely
stunning to see how much change has happened at the state and local levels,
unleashed in part by these incentive programs," Duncan said.
As with any federal grant program, budgets will be
finalized after discussions between the grantees and the Department, and the
money will be distributed over time as the grantees meet established
benchmarks.
The $4.35 billion Race to the Top Fund is an
unprecedented federal investment in reform. The program includes $4 billion for
statewide reform grants and $350 million to support states working together to
improve the quality of their assessments, which the Department plans to award
in September. The Race to the Top state competition is designed to reward
states that are leading the way in comprehensive, coherent, statewide education
reform across four key areas:
* Adopting standards and
assessments that prepare students to succeed in college and the workplace;
* Building data systems that
measure student growth and success, and inform teachers and principals how to
improve instruction;
* Recruiting, developing,
rewarding, and retaining effective teachers and principals, especially where
they are needed most; and
* Turning around their
lowest-performing schools.
The 10 winning applicants have adopted rigorous common,
college- and career-ready standards in reading and math, created pipelines and
incentives to put the most effective teachers in high-need schools, and all
have alternative pathways to teacher and principal certification.
In the first round of competition supporting state-based
reforms, Delaware and Tennessee won grants based on their comprehensive plans
to reform their schools and the statewide support for those plans.
The Department of Education has posted all Phase 2
applications online. Phase 2 peer reviewers' comments, and scores will be
available on the website by Aug. 25; videos of states' presentations will be
posted by Sept. 10. Phase 1 materials are available online.