A r c h i v e d  I n f o r m a t i o n

   FOR RELEASE                                   Contact:  Kathryn Kahler    August 3, 1994                                          (202) 401-3026

FIVE MORE STATES RECEIVE GOALS 2000 EDUCATION REFORM GRANTS: KANSAS, MAINE, NEW YORK, PENNSYLVANIA, WASHINGTON

Five additional states will receive federal funds to develop comprehensive, statewide school improvement plans, U.S. Secretary of Education Richard W. Riley announced today.

The awards are under the new Goals 2000: Educate America Act, signed by President Clinton March 31.

Receiving grants are: Kansas, $846,349; Maine, $495,905; New York, $6,995,086; Pennsylvania, $3,973,405; and Washington, $1,546,287.

"Goals 2000 will help parents and teachers, students and concerned adults work together to create safe, disciplined classrooms and help all students make progress toward high academic standards," Riley said.

"The success of American public education remains, as always, in local hands. Goals 2000 encourages parents, educators and community members to use flexibility and creativity to improve local schools in ways that will dramatically improve our children's ability to learn," Riley said.

Under Title III of the new law, the states and communities within the states will have the opportunity to develop and implement comprehensive school improvement plans to:

In applying for Goals 2000 funds, states were asked to describe how school improvement plans will be developed through a broad-based panel and through outreach strategies involving parents, educators and communities members; how subgrants will be made to communities for local reform, professional development activities and pre-service teacher education; and how plans to use technology to improve teaching and learning will be developed.

Each state's share of $91.5 million in fiscal year 1994 funds is calculated on a formula based on allocations under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act. To assist states and communities in implementing their Goals 2000 education plans, President Clinton has requested $700 million in the next fiscal year, increasing to $1 billion in subsequent years.

The Goals 2000 law requires that at least 60 percent of the first-year funds go to local education agencies and individual schools, with the percentage increasing to at least 90 percent in future years.

The states named today join Hawaii and Michigan in receiving first-year Goals 2000 funds. Riley said applications from a dozen other states are pending, with additional awards expected shortly.


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