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State and Federal Programs

 

 

A woman with blonde hair and a green shirt smiles for the camera.

Lora Sanders

State and Federal Programs Director

903-737-2000 ext 2055

lsanders@northlamar.net

  • Levels of Support Include:

    • District planning, implementation, and reporting for Federal and State Programs: 
    • Coordinating the identification and services of all at-risk and economically disadvantaged students.
    • District and campus staffing focused on the supplemental, educational assistance of at-risk and economically disadvantaged students.
    • Monitor procedures utilized in conducting annual needs assessments and planning and implementing programs designed for school improvement,
    • Facilitating the comprehensive needs assessment of Federal and State programs.
    • Parent & Family Engagement coordination & activities 
    • Organizing and managing summer programs: summer school, summer staff development, and summer curricula projects
  • What is Title I, Part A? 

    Title I, Part A - Improving Basic Programs Operated by LEA

    Title I, Part A is part of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (ESEA), and is the foundation formally known as Every Student Succeeds Act. Title I funding is used for improving basic programs operated by states and local school districts across the nation. The funding is supplemental funding and is used for resources to help schools with high concentrations of students from low-income families to provide a high-quality education that will enable all children to meet the state's rigorous student performance standards. Title I, Part A supports schools in implementing a school-wide program. These programs must use effective methods and instructional strategies that are grounded in scientifically evidenced research base. Currently Title I campuses in North Lamar ISD operate school-wide programs which enable the Title I resources to be used to upgrade the educational program on each campus.

    How does my district receive Title I dollars?

    The United States Department of Education targets states, districts, schools, and students with the “greatest need”. Funds flow to the Texas Education Agency through a series of complex formulas based upon the most recent Census count of poverty families residing in the state. Funds then flow from the state to school districts in Texas. Then from districts to campuses based primarily on free and reduced lunch participation counts or other poverty measures.

    How does North Lamar ISD use Title I funds?

    This supplemental funding is typically used for additional instructional staff, research with evidence-based instructional materials, extended student learning opportunities, professional development for teachers, enhancement of family engagement, and for other activities designed to enable every student to succeed at the highest levels of performance. North Lamar ISD uses their Title I funds on 5  campuses that are designated as school-wide campuses. The school-wide program provides for supplemental resources to upgrade the educational program on these campuses.

  • The purpose of the Migrant Education Program is to design and support programs that help migrant students overcome the challenges of mobility, cultural and language barriers, social isolation, and other difficulties associated with a migratory lifestyle. These efforts are aimed at helping migrant students succeed in school and successfully transition to postsecondary education or employment. North Lamar ISD receives a very limited amount of funding under this program, and therefore, enters into a “shared services arrangement” with Education Service Center Region VIII located in Pittsburg. Staff at the service center work collaboratively with our district to ensure that students are identified and served.

  • Teacher and Principal Training and Recruiting Fund

    Title II, Part A - Teacher and Principal Training and Recruiting (TPTR) Federal dollars provide supplemental funding to improve student achievement. The funds are used to elevate teacher and principal quality through recruitment, hiring and retention strategies and to maintain the number of highly qualified teachers in the classroom and highly qualified principals and assistant principals in schools. The program uses scientifically evidence based professional development trainings and holds the district and schools accountable for improvements in student academic performance. These funds support a portion of the professional development of staff in the North Lamar ISD.

  • Title III, Part A of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), as reauthorized under the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA), aims to ensure that English language learner and immigrant students attain English language proficiency and meet the same challenging State academic content and student academic achievement standards as all children are expected to meet. In North Lamar ISD, these funds provide supplementary support to students identified as second language learners in the core academic areas as well as provides teachers with strategies to teach English language learners in the core academic areas.

  • The purpose of Title IV is to provide funds for school safety and the enhancement of the whole child. In North Lamar ISD we focus on safe schools. Following Governor Abbott's recommended Safety Plan for Safe Schools, we have implemented a plan where the designated district-wide staff will work with campus administrators, campus staff, and students to address the emotional, social, and behavioral health needs of students that serve as barriers to academic success.

  • Children and families not living in their own home may have the right to immediate enrollment and may not need their documentation records upon enrollment.

    Visit the McKinney-Vento page for more information to support families in transition and/or students experiencing homelessness.

  • The goal of State Compensatory Education (SCE) is to reduce any disparity in performance on assessment instruments or disparity in the rates of high school completion between students at risk of dropping out of school and all other students (TEC Section 29.081). State Compensatory Education funds were authorized by the legislature to provide financial support for the programs and/or services designed by districts to increase the achievement of students at risk of dropping out of school.