SCORE 2010 Annual Report | Page 24

Section 1: Year In Review Endnotes implementing a new evaluation system. The district will then use that evaluation system to recruit and reward high-performing teachers, provide additional support and growth opportunities to all teachers, and remove the lowest-performing teachers. In August 2010, the U.S. Department of Education announced that the Niswonger Foundation in Greeneville was one of only 49 winners of the Department’s Investing in Innovation competition (from a total of 1,698 applicants). As a result, 15 districts in Northeast Tennessee will receive $21 million over the next five years to implement rigorous coursework through a combination of distance learning, online learning, Advanced Placement, and dual enrollment courses. The grant will provide a model for how rural districts in the state can provide all students with access to rigorous courses. In addition to Race to the Top, three different grantees in Tennessee won a total of $72 million in the U.S. Department of Education’s Teacher Incentive Fund competition in September 2010 to develop new, comprehensive plans for rewarding highly effective teachers and principals. Knox County Schools will use its $26.5 million grant to ACT. (2010). College Readiness Benchmark Attainment by State. Retrieved from: http://www.act.org/news/ data/10/benchmarks.html. expand the Teacher Advancement Program to 14 new schools while Memphis City Schools will use its $9.5 million grant to reward high-performing teachers and principals in the district’s lowestperforming schools. In addition, the Tennessee Department of Education will use the final $36 million grant to help more than 100 schools across the state develop comprehensive teacher compensation plans. i Together, these local initiatives, in addition to the state’s Race to the Top effort, have brought over $710 million in federal and competitive philanthropic funding to the state over the past two years. These grants, along with the significant political will that exists for education reform and the large number of policy changes the state has made, make it clear that 2010 was a historic year for education reform in Tennessee. Now, with these positive political, policy, and funding conditions in place, it is time for Tennessee to begin aggressively implementing its recent reforms. It is to this topic this report now turns. iii Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Development (2010). Labor Force Estimates – United States and Tennessee. Retrieved from: http:// www.tennessee.gov/labor-wfd/labor_figures/ january2010county.pdf. ii The Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions (2011). Vanderbilt Poll. Full results retrieved from: http:// www.tennessean.com/assets/pdf/DN17014929.PDF. Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Development (2008). Investing for Growth in Tennessee’s Workforce to 2016. Retrieved from: http:// www.doleta.gov/Programs/2007ReportsAndPlans/ Economic_Analysis_Reports/TN.pdf. iv U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (2010). Education Pays. Retrieved from: http://www.bls.gov/emp/ep_chart_001. htm. v Retrieved from: http://www.chattanoogastate.edu/ttc/ programs/mechatronics/. Federal and Philanthropic Grants Race to the Top Location Statewide Tennessee Department of Education. (2010). Tennessee Department of Education Announces New Standards Training. Retrieved: https://news.tennesseeanytime.org/ node/2038 xii Frist, B. State is Poised to Build on Learning Gains. The Tennessean. 18 January 2011. Retrieved from: http:// blogs.tennessean.com/opinion/2011/01/08/state-ispoised-to-build-on-learning-gains/. xiii Achieve (2009). Closing the Expectations Gap: Fourth Annual 50-State Progress Report on the Alignment of High School Policies with the Demands of College and Careers . Retrieved from: http://www.achieve.org/ files/50-state-2009.pdf. xiv Tennessee Department of Education official. Interview with SCORE. 29 December 2010. xv xv iRetrieved from: http://www.achieve.org/PARCC. vii SCORE ranking based on reading and math averages for 4th and 8th grade from the 2009 National Assessment of Education Progress examination. Data retrieved from: http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/ statecomparisons/. U.S. Census Bureau (2009). 2009 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates. R1502. Percent of People 25 Years and Over Who Have Completed a Bachelor’s Degree. Retrieved from: http:// factfinder.census.gov/servlet/GRTTable?_bm=y&-_box_ head_nbr=R1502&-ds_name=ACS_2009_1YR_G00_&format=US-30&-CONTEXT=grt viii Program Offices of Research and Education Accountability, Tennessee Comptroller of the Treasury (2009). On the Horizon: More Rigorous Standards and New Graduation Requirements. Retrieved from: http://www.mnps.org/ AssetFactory.aspx?did=39341. xi Amount $501 Million SCORE ranking based on reading and math averages for 4th and 8th grade from the 2009 National Assessment of Education Progress examination. Data retrieved from: http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/statecomparisons/. xviiU.S. Department of Education (2009). Race to the Top Program Executive Summary. Retrieved from: http://www2.ed.gov/programs/racetothetop/executivesummary.pdf. The Tennessee Value-Added Assessment system is a system that follows the progress of each student in Tennessee from third grade through the end of high school and provides a precise and reliable estimate of how much students learn in a given year. xviii General Assembly Passes Race to the Top Act. The Chattanoogan. 15 January 2010. Retrieved from: http:// www.chattanoogan.com/articles/article_166881.asp. Xix Ix Gates Foundation Teacher Effectivness Initiative $ 110 Million Teacher Incentive Fund Statewide, Knoxville, Memphis $ 72 Million Investing In Innovation Fund 24 Memphis Northeast Tennessee $ 21 Million The State of Education In Tennessee Frist, B. Race to the Top Swiftly Changes Education Dynamic. USA Today. 31 March