The House Appropriators are proposing to re-fund the Striving Readers Comprehensive Literacy Program to the $160 million level. This has been done after much work by a group of IRA members and members of the coalition: Advocates for Literacy. They were able to make the case that the federal government should not be withdrawing from funding every literacy program. This was one of the outcomes of the funding fight from last year where every federal literacy program was eliminated. However, while that was happening it had taken US ED two years to develop and spend money from fiscal year 2010. USED awarded funds to six states. Earlier 46 states had applied for and received funds for the state literacy teams. The next step is for the full House to take up the measure and then negotiate with the Senate - where their committee has proposed $183 million for the program.
The following is the language from the proposal.
the language IN THE HOUSE BILL that directs how literacy funding should be used: Starts on page 99 of the bill.
Provided further, That $160,000,000 shall be available under section 1502 of the
1 ESEA for a comprehensive literacy development and edu-
2 cation program to advance literacy skills, including pre-
3 literacy skills, reading, and writing, for students from
4 birth through grade 12, including limited-English-pro-
ficient students and students with disabilities, of which
6 one-half of 1 percent shall be reserved for the Secretary
7 of the Interior for such a program at schools funded by
8 the Bureau of Indian Education, one-half of 1 percent
9 shall be reserved for grants to the outlying areas for such
10 a program, up to 5 percent may be reserved for national
11 activities, and the remainder shall be used to award com-
12 petitive grants to State educational agencies for such a
13 program, of which a State educational agency may reserve ·
14 up to 5 percent for State leadership activities, including
15 technical assistance and training, data collection, report-
16 ing, and administration, and shall subgrant not less than
17 95 percent to local educational agencies or, in the case
18 of early literacy, to local educational agencies or other
19 nonprofit providers of early childhood education that part-
20 ner with a public or private nonprofit organization or
21 agency with a demonstrated record of effectiveness in im-
22 proving the early literacy development of children from
23 birth through kindergarten entry and in providing profes-
24 sional development in early literacy, giving priority to such
25 agencies or other entities serving greater numbers or per-
1 centages of disadvantaged children: Provided further, That
2 the State educational agency shall ensure that at least 15
3 percent of the subgranted funds are used to serve children
4 from birth through age 5, 40 percent are used to serve
5 students in kindergarten through grade 5, and 40 percent
6 are used to serve students in middle and high school in-
7 eluding an equitable distribution of funds between middle
8 and high schools: Provided further, That eligible entities
9 receiving subgrants from State educational agencies shall
10 use such funds for services and activities that have the
11 characteristics of effective literacy instruction through
12 professional development, screening and assessment, tar-
13 geted interventions for students reading below grade level
14 and other research-based methods of improving classroom
15 instruction and practice.